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Excessive Entitlement From a Networked Relational Perspective

After Excessive Teacher and Faculty Entitlement

ISBN: 978-1-83797-878-6, eISBN: 978-1-83797-877-9

Publication date: 18 September 2024

Abstract

As Ratnam makes clear, a cultural–historical perspective on teacher/faculty excessive entitlement is indispensable if we are to use this concept to work with, rather than undermine, education practitioners. In this chapter, a networked relational model of activity is proposed as a tool for understanding excessive entitlement from a cultural–historical activity theory (CHAT) perspective, so that the transformative potential of both entitlement and the modeling of it may be harnessed. The networked relational model, which represents CHAT activity systems as a hand-draw or painted network of relationships between actors and artifacts, allows its creators, in their capacity as researchers or academics, to use it as an imaginative artifact in the Wartofskian sense. That is, by representing activity systems of academic performance as networks of interacting entities, the emergence of excessive entitlement can be traced to, and perhaps mitigated through the relationships that they represent. In this regard, the why, what, and how artifacts proposed by Engeström are taken up as useful means for enhancing the functioning of the networked relational model not just as a tool for analyses of entitlement but also a means for envisioning alternative countercultures into being.

Keywords

Citation

Botha, L. (2024), "Excessive Entitlement From a Networked Relational Perspective", Ratnam, T. and Craig, C.J. (Ed.) After Excessive Teacher and Faculty Entitlement (Advances in Research on Teaching, Vol. 47), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 43-62. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1479-368720240000047004

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024 Louis Botha. Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited