1st Edition
Freedom to Learn The threat to student academic freedom and why it needs to be reclaimed
1. The hidden curriculum 2. Student rights 3. A paradox 4. The performative turn 5. Participative performativity 6. Bodily performativity 7. Emotional performativity 8. Reclaiming student-centred
Biography
Bruce Macfarlane is Professor of Higher Education at the University of Southampton, UK.
"This is a powerful book, for both the higher education theorist and the university practitioner. The ideas provide a refreshingly alternative perspective on some common and dominant concepts that have guided teaching and learning for the last 30 years or so [… ] Macfarlane’s book spoke to my feelings of unease about my practice and the difficulties of being a university teacher." - Tony Harland, Higher Education (Springer)
"Refreshingly, the book avoids the pitfalls of generalisation by providing historical examples from Western and non-Western contexts, making the text equally releveant in any country with a massified higher education system [...] The book was written by and targeted at academics, but I would argue that the narrative provided is useful to students and I don't think I took away any less from it by being a student. In fact, the book provided me with a certain amount of previously undiscovered self awareness of my own learning style." - Luice S. Dvorakova, University of Queensland, Australia
"My guess is that this book will make more that a few people in education feel a little uncomfortable. And so it should. The book challenges us to consider a number of things we seem to be taking for granted." -John Lea, Association of Colleges, UK






