Article

Teacher Agency in Universities: Exploring Underlying Beliefs and Agentic Orientations when Navigating University Teaching Practices

Details

Citation

Kusters M, Rushton E, De Vetten A, Admiraal W & Van der Rijst R (2025) Teacher Agency in Universities: Exploring Underlying Beliefs and Agentic Orientations when Navigating University Teaching Practices. Teaching in Higher Education. https://doi.org/10.1080/13562517.2025.2562584

Abstract
University lecturers face challenges aligning their teaching beliefs with evolving institutional and societal demands. This study explores how teacher agency – briefly defined as lecturers’ capacity to act purposefully to influence their teaching practices – could support this alignment. Semi-structured and scenario-based interviews with 12 participants at a Scottish university revealed three shared agentic orientations related to navigating teaching practices: (1) Accommodating & Supporting, (2) Leading, Accommodating & Supporting, and (3) Leading. These agentic orientations reflect distinct responses to teaching challenges. Within these three groups, lecturers expressed common beliefs about teaching, namely (1) Inclusivity and Equity, (2) Responsibility and Collaboration, and (3) Change and Innovation. The study provides empirical insights into the dynamic, context-dependent nature of teacher agency and shows how lecturers’ beliefs support their approach to teaching. It frames teacher agency as a heuristic for understanding the conditions that enable lecturers to act with agency.

Keywords
Teacher agency; university; agentic orientations; beliefs; scenarios

StatusEarly Online
Publication date online31/10/2025
Date accepted by journal20/08/2025
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/37526
ISSN1356-2517
eISSN1470-1294

People (1)

Professor Lizzie Rushton

Professor Lizzie Rushton

Professor of Education, Education

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