3.8 Article

Curriculum development in the higher education literature: A synthesis focusing on construction management programmes

Journal

INDUSTRY AND HIGHER EDUCATION
Volume 36, Issue 4, Pages 456-470

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/09504222211044894

Keywords

Construction management; higher education; curriculum development; bibliographic data analysis

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The research highlights the lack of connectivity among studies on curriculum development in higher education institutions, with the prevailing academic notion of 'individualism and self' exacerbating the issue. The findings emphasize the urgent need for a more collaborative and global community of practice. There is a fundamental absence of a clear agenda for curriculum development in construction management programmes, indicating the necessity for optimization in future educational provisions.
This research first contextualises curriculum development in higher education institutions (HEIs) before focusing specifically on construction management programmes in order to engender wider polemic discourse and new insights into current provisions. The overarching epistemology adopts both interpretivist and pragmatist philosophical stances, couched within inductive reasoning, to critically analyse extant literature as a secondary data source, with each publication representing a unit of analysis. Thematic groupings of research activity are then clustered and interconnections between researchers and research themes are identified using bibliometrics. The findings illustrate that while curriculum development in HEIs has received increasing scrutiny and attention, there is a notable lack of connectivity among the studies conducted. This lack of a cohesive body of knowledge is exacerbated by the prevailing academic notion of 'individualism and self' vis-a-vis the 'collective team'. This leads to an emergent working hypothesis, namely, that bespoke curriculum development occurs within an 'every person for themselves' mentality. Cumulatively, these issues reported upon serve to illustrate a fundamental absence of a clear agenda for curriculum development in construction management programmes. In turn, this finding underscores the urgent need for a more prominent collaborative and global community of practice to optimise future educational provisions.

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