Utilising police knowledge and skills: experiences from police practitioners studying a police specific degree
Utilising police knowledge and skills: experiences from police practitioners studying a police specific degree
This article presents preliminary findings from a longitudinal study contributing to the current debate about police education and professionalising the police in England and Wales. The findings in this article are taken from a survey administered in 2016 to third-year students enrolled in a policing degree. Surveys were distributed to police officer students in the last year of their degree programme asking for their perceptions of the degree, their organisation's support for their learning and how they felt that learning was utilised in their workplace. Supplementary to the survey, interviews were conducted with the students after their graduation in 2018. The research findings suggest that students perceived the benefits of obtaining a degree-level qualification as fundamentally important to their professional development and personal decision-making at work. Early support initially received for study leave purposes, rarely extended beyond this practical provision. The extent to which police organisations valued the learning from the degree was perceived to be lacking. Senior-ranked students were more likely to be able to use and promote their newly acquired skills and knowledge in the workplace compared with lower-ranked students. Such findings may inform scholars’ and practitioners’ continued evaluation of police education reforms in England and Wales.
Police education, organisational value, police, professionalisation
Fleming, Jenny
61449384-ccab-40b3-b494-0852c956ca19
Norman, Jennifer
470a8d5a-96f4-43c7-b03e-d1b31f43e2ff
Fleming, Jenny
61449384-ccab-40b3-b494-0852c956ca19
Norman, Jennifer
470a8d5a-96f4-43c7-b03e-d1b31f43e2ff
Fleming, Jenny and Norman, Jennifer
(2021)
Utilising police knowledge and skills: experiences from police practitioners studying a police specific degree.
International Journal of Police Science & Management.
(doi:10.1177/14613557211064051).
Abstract
This article presents preliminary findings from a longitudinal study contributing to the current debate about police education and professionalising the police in England and Wales. The findings in this article are taken from a survey administered in 2016 to third-year students enrolled in a policing degree. Surveys were distributed to police officer students in the last year of their degree programme asking for their perceptions of the degree, their organisation's support for their learning and how they felt that learning was utilised in their workplace. Supplementary to the survey, interviews were conducted with the students after their graduation in 2018. The research findings suggest that students perceived the benefits of obtaining a degree-level qualification as fundamentally important to their professional development and personal decision-making at work. Early support initially received for study leave purposes, rarely extended beyond this practical provision. The extent to which police organisations valued the learning from the degree was perceived to be lacking. Senior-ranked students were more likely to be able to use and promote their newly acquired skills and knowledge in the workplace compared with lower-ranked students. Such findings may inform scholars’ and practitioners’ continued evaluation of police education reforms in England and Wales.
Text
Norman Fleming Utilising police knowledge and skills 2709 FINAL RESUB
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 29 October 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 30 December 2021
Keywords:
Police education, organisational value, police, professionalisation
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Local EPrints ID: 453105
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/453105
ISSN: 1461-3557
PURE UUID: 5a24c4df-049b-446d-a66e-d9b95cb8a988
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Date deposited: 08 Jan 2022 21:21
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 06:56
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Author:
Jennifer Norman
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