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Research, practice and education in the built environment

Wood, GD

Authors

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Dr Gerard Wood G.D.Wood@salford.ac.uk
Associate Dean Academic QA & Enhancement



Abstract

This thesis consists of two parts: the body of published work is presented as a portfolio of
10 publications and forms Part II. Part I consists of a critical review of those publications.
In the context of the built environment sector, the overarching themes of the published
works are the relationships between:
research and emerging concepts in the field and the working practices of construction
and property professionals;
practice as an interdisciplinary activity and educational programmes;
programmes and curricula within higher education and the relevance of research.
The critical review explores the portfolio from a micro and macro perspective to
demonstrate that the work is considered at an individual publication level, and also within
the extended boundaries of the discipline. This opens up broader horizons and assists in
comparing the knowledge claims being made with other key benchmark publications.
The principal conclusion associated with the research-practice relationship is that
practitioners are largely driven by commercial imperatives and the associated need to solve
problems expediently. Positivist perspectives therefore have more influence on built
environment practitioners than constructivist methodologies. This should inform the
design of research projects if researchers wish to be relevant to practice.
The main finding linked to the practice-education relationship is that normative
interdisciplinarity requiring a collaborative transcendence is more relevant to built
environment practice than a phenomenological position where interdisciplinarity exists
within the individual. This should inform the design of undergraduate built environment
curricula in order to adequately prepare students for practice.
In the education-research relationship this thesis concludes that there is a need to develop a
more comprehensive definition of scholarship or scholarly activity in support of built
environment education to include applied/consultancy-based research, market-based
studies, professional updating and the writing of textbooks. This should inform both the
recruitment and promotion processes within universities.

Citation

Wood, G. Research, practice and education in the built environment. (Thesis). Salford: University of Salford

Thesis Type Thesis
Deposit Date Mar 9, 2016