scispace - formally typeset
M

Malcolm Tight

Researcher at Lancaster University

Publications -  126
Citations -  5416

Malcolm Tight is an academic researcher from Lancaster University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Higher education & Comparative education. The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 117 publications receiving 4832 citations. Previous affiliations of Malcolm Tight include University of Warwick.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Writing on academic careers

TL;DR: In the UK, academic work has been conceptualised as involving one or more of five overlapping roles: teaching, research and managing, plus writing and networking as discussed by the authors. But, while much has been written in recent years on the teaching role, relatively little of a cross-disciplinary nature appears to have been written on academic researching, writing or networking.
Journal ArticleDOI

Examining the research/teaching nexus

TL;DR: The idea of the research/teaching nexus has become of increasing importance in thinking about higher education over the last three decades as discussed by the authors, and this idea recognizes the two key functions of higher education and argues that they are, or should be, closely linked.
Journal ArticleDOI

Education, Education, Education! The vision of lifelong learning in the Kennedy, Dearing and Fryer reports

TL;DR: The year 1997 witnessed the publication of three major policy reports related to the development of lifelong learning in the UK: the Kennedy, Dearing and Fryer reports on further, higher and continuing education, respectively as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bridging the Divide: a comparative analysis of articles in higher education journals published inside and outside North America.

TL;DR: The authors compared articles published in three leading North American higher education journals during the year 2000, and found that the North American articles evidence a dominance of North American-based authors, a greater focus on the student experience, and on institutional and national level studies, and a much stronger emphasis on multivariate analysis as a method.