1st Edition

Improving Opportunities to Engage in Learning A Study of the Access to Higher Education Diploma

By Nalita James, Hugh Busher Copyright 2018
    160 Pages
    by Routledge

    158 Pages
    by Routledge

    Improving Opportunities to Engage in Learning investigates the experiences of mature adult learners returning to formal education. The book challenges the policy discourses in which Access to Higher Education survives by suggesting that continuing education is more about determination by students to alter their identities and career opportunities than meeting narrow performative criteria of financial targets. Chapters explore students’ struggles with institutional and social structures in the current political and socio-economic climate, before identifying how the transformation of their learner identities is facilitated in the courses by collaborative cultures and supportive tutors.

    The book addresses a research gap in knowledge about students’ and tutors’ experiences of Access to Higher Education courses, presenting a broad perspective on the importance and difficulties of such courses through listening to the voices of students and tutors undertaking a variety of Access to HE pathways. The authors argue that despite success on their courses benefiting the national economy as well as students individually, the social and financial costs of continuing education is almost entirely shifted onto students’ shoulders by policymakers. Despite the costs, students can still see Access to HE as a chance to improve their lives, reflecting the neoliberal discourse of personal responsibility and risk embedded in broader national social and policy discourses.

    Improving Opportunities to Engage in Learning will be of great interest to researchers, academics and postgraduate students in the fields of further and higher education, widening participation, social justice and sociology of education, and education policy and politics.

    Contents

    Acknowledgements

    Preface

    Part 1 Closed Doors

    Chapter 1 The Landscape of the Access to Higher Education Diploma

    Chapter 2 Researching the Access to HE Diploma

    Part 2 Stepping Through the Door

    Chapter 3 The Impact of Social and Economic Contexts on Accessing HE

    Chapter 4 Struggling to Return to Formal Learning: Becoming as an Access to HE Student

    Chapter 5 Practices of Transition: Being an Access to HE Student

    Chapter 6 The Access to HE Course as a Community of Practice

    Part 3 Opening Doors

    Chapter 7 Access to Higher Education Tutors’ Stories

    Chapter 8 Using Inclusive Teaching and Learning Strategies on the Access to HE Course

    Chapter 9 The Significance and Importance of the Access to HE Diploma for Students Returning to Education

    Index

    Biography

    Nalita James is Associate Professor in Lifelong Learning at the University of Leicester.

    Hugh Busher is Associate Professor in Education at the University of Leicester.