280 Pages
    by Routledge

    280 Pages
    by Routledge

    Improving Learning by Widening Participation in Higher Education presents a strong and coherent rationale for improving learning for diverse students from a range of socio-economic, ethnic/racial and gender backgrounds within higher education, and for adults across the life course.

    Edited by Miriam David, the Associate Director of the ESRC’s highly successful Teaching and Learning Research Programme, with contributions from the seven projects on Widening Participation in Higher Education (viz Gill Crozier and Diane Reay; Chris Hockings; Alison Fuller and Sue Heath; Anna Vignoles; Geoff Hayward and Hubert Ertl; Julian Williams and Pauline Davis; Gareth Parry and Ann-Marie Bathmaker), this book provides clear and comprehensive research evidence on the policies, processes, pedagogies and practices of widening or increasing participation in higher education. This evidence is situated within the contexts of changing individual and institutional circumstances across the life course, and wider international transformations of higher education in relation to the global knowledge economy.

    Improving Learning by Widening Participation in Higher Education also considers:

    • the changing UK policy contexts of post-compulsory education;
    • how socio-economically disadvantaged students – raced and gendered – fare through schools and into post-compulsory education;
    • the kinds of academic and vocational courses, including Maths, undertaken;
    • the changing forms of institutional and pedagogic practices within higher education;
    • how adults view the role of higher education in their lives.

    This book, based upon both qualitative studies and quantitative datasets, offers a rare insight into the overall implications for current and future policy and will provide a springboard for further research and debate. It will appeal both to policy-makers and practitioners, as well as students within higher education.

    @contents:  Selected Contents: Series Preface by Andrew Pollard  Part 1 – What are the issues?  CHAPTER 1: Miriam David  Introduction to the dilemmas of Widening Participation in Higher Education  Part 2: What does the research tell us?  CHAPTER 2: Gareth Parry  Policy contexts: Differentiation, competition and policies for widening participation  CHAPTER 3: Access, participation and diversity questions in relation to different forms of post-compulsory further and higher education (FHEs) arranged in 4 sections:  Section 1. Anna Vignoles and Claire Crawford:  The importance of prior educational experiences  Section 2. Gill Crozier, Diane Reay and John Clayton:  The Socio-Cultural and Learning Experiences of Working Class Students in Higher Education  Section 3. Hubert Ertl, Geoff Hayward, Michael Hoelscher:  Learners’ transition from Vocational Education and Training to Higher Education  Section 4 Ann-Marie Bathmaker:  Seamlessness or separation: negotiating further and higher education boundaries in dual sector institutions  CHAPTER 4: Pedagogies for social diversity and difference (arranged in two sections)  Section 1. Chris Hockings, Sandra Cooke and Marion Bowl:  Learning and teaching in two universities within the context of increasing student diversity – complexity, contradictions and challenges  Section 2. Julian Williams, Laura Black, Pauline Davis, Paul Hernandez-Martinez, Graeme Hutcheson, Sue Nicholson, Maria Pampaka and Geoff Wake:  Keeping open the door to mathematically-demanding programmes in further and higher education: a cultural model of value  CHAPTER 5: Outcomes in terms of age-based participation (arranged in two sections)  Section 1: Anna Vignoles and Nattavudh Powdthavee:  Diversity of experiences in higher education  Section 2: Alison Fuller and Sue Heath:  Educational decision-making, social networks and the new widening participation  Part 3: What are the overall implications both for policy and for research?  CHAPTER 6: Miriam David (with contributions from Geoff Hayward and Hubert Ertl, section 3):  Conclusions: What are the overall findings and implications for evidence-based policies on fair access and widening participation?  CHAPTER 7: Miriam David (with contributions from Gill Crozier, Geoff Hayward and Hubert Ertl, Julian Williams and colleagues, and Chris Hockings):  How do we improve learning by widening participation in HE: institutional practices and pedagogies for social diversity?  APPENDICES ON METHODOLOGIES  1. Gareth Parry  2. Anna Vignoles  3. Gill Crozier  4. Geoff Hayward  5. Julian Williams  6. Chris Hockings  7. Alison Fuller

    Biography

    Miriam David is Professor of Sociology of Education and Associate Director (Higher Education) of the ESRC’s Teaching and Learning Research Programme at the Institute of Education, University of London.