Guest editorial: organisational change as shifting conversation, narratives and stories
journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 01:13authored byJulie Wolfram Cox
PURPOSE - This paper aims to review property and valuation education within the university context, using the experience of program re-development at RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia, as a case study. DESIGN/METHODOLOGY/APPROACH - The paper utilises a literature review, comparing and contrasting the program renewal process within the university to experiences elsewhere and their inherent values. In critically examining some of the difficulties found within the program renewal process, issues symptomatic of the wider valuation profession and tertiary education system have been revealed. It provides the genesis of a wider study linking tertiary education and the valuation profession's needs in the mid-term. FINDINGS - Valuation education is often subsumed within a generalist property curriculum. As part of their resource allocation models universities are now paying close attention to teaching quality, research output, and graduate outcomes, often favouring generalist curricula rather than discipline-specific. There needs to be a careful analysis of the university experience of property and valuation students to ensure that graduate capabilities meet industry expectations, and that graduates themselves are able to adapt to future change. There also needs to be greater attention paid to the quality of teaching within universities and more evidence that mainstream tertiary teaching pedagogy is properly applied within the programs offered.