The Australian government has set ambitious targets for increased higher-education participation of people from low socioeconomic backgrounds. There is, thus, a pressing need to explore how best to empower these students with what they require to progress and succeed at university. The paper draws on a literature review and qualitative data from a national study in which 89 students from low socioeconomic backgrounds and 26 staff were interviewed. The paper argues that demystifying academic culture and discourses for these students is a key step institutions and staff can take in assisting students from low socioeconomic backgrounds to progress and succeed at university. A recurring theme to emerge from both the literature and interviews wi...
The Australian Government has set two targets for the nation\u27s universities: (i) increase the pro...
The Australian higher education sector has grappled, with little success, to increase the participat...
The discourse around students from low socio-economic backgrounds often adopts a deficit conception ...
The Australian Federal Government’s recent commitment to increasing the numbers of students from low...
This article examines the conceptual frames that might be used to consider the success and achieveme...
This article examines the conceptual frames that might be used to consider the success and achieveme...
[Abstract]: This article argues that the contemporary Australian university constitutes a new and un...
As the Australian higher education population further diversifies as a result of federal government ...
As higher education populations further diversify, new thinking and approaches are needed to ensure ...
The Australian Government's response to the 2008 Bradley Review of higher education has set clear ta...
This paper reports on an interpretivist research study that sought to articulate the strategies bein...
The widening participation agenda in Australian higher education heralds changes that demand fresh t...
This paper reports on an interpretivist research study that sought to articulate the strategies bein...
Australian higher education has adopted a widening participation agenda with a focus on the particip...
Australian higher education has adopted a widening participation agenda with a focus on the particip...
The Australian Government has set two targets for the nation\u27s universities: (i) increase the pro...
The Australian higher education sector has grappled, with little success, to increase the participat...
The discourse around students from low socio-economic backgrounds often adopts a deficit conception ...
The Australian Federal Government’s recent commitment to increasing the numbers of students from low...
This article examines the conceptual frames that might be used to consider the success and achieveme...
This article examines the conceptual frames that might be used to consider the success and achieveme...
[Abstract]: This article argues that the contemporary Australian university constitutes a new and un...
As the Australian higher education population further diversifies as a result of federal government ...
As higher education populations further diversify, new thinking and approaches are needed to ensure ...
The Australian Government's response to the 2008 Bradley Review of higher education has set clear ta...
This paper reports on an interpretivist research study that sought to articulate the strategies bein...
The widening participation agenda in Australian higher education heralds changes that demand fresh t...
This paper reports on an interpretivist research study that sought to articulate the strategies bein...
Australian higher education has adopted a widening participation agenda with a focus on the particip...
Australian higher education has adopted a widening participation agenda with a focus on the particip...
The Australian Government has set two targets for the nation\u27s universities: (i) increase the pro...
The Australian higher education sector has grappled, with little success, to increase the participat...
The discourse around students from low socio-economic backgrounds often adopts a deficit conception ...