This article outlines how the potential for students to be co-participants, via a critical education, risks being further co-opted through the marketization of higher education by constructing students as consumers with power over academics to make judgments on pedagogic quality through student satisfaction ratings. We start by outlining the relevant components of marketization processes, and their associated practices of financialization and managerialism that have developed in response to the “legitimation crisis” in HE and argue that these have profoundly altered the university landscape with a significant impact on our working practices. Student engagement is increasingly being appropriated as a quantifiable measurement of “student sati...
the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits the unrestricted use, distribution, and repr...
In this chapter, we set out to provide an overview of recent critical responses to the corporatisati...
The notion of students as consumers who exercise educational decisions based on economic self-intere...
This article considers the impact of the new Consumer Rights Act 2016 and the Higher Education an...
Universities have focused on teaching and learning at a time when quality has become the marker of d...
This article challenges the practice of encouraging teacher educators to strive and raise the levels...
We present data from an exploratory qualitative interview-based pedagogical research project on the ...
This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by Taylor and Francis in Cambridge Journal of...
The global Higher Education sector (HE) is undergoing a metamorphosis. No longer is HE the sole pres...
This article is about student engagement and in particular the engagement of students in internal in...
This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Education P...
The restructuring of higher education according to neo-liberal market principles has constructed the...
Intensifying marketisation across higher education (HE) in England continues to generate critical co...
Further and higher education have witnessed something of a paradigm shift in recent years. This arti...
One could be excused for failing to recognise today’s universities as the inheritors of the global h...
the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits the unrestricted use, distribution, and repr...
In this chapter, we set out to provide an overview of recent critical responses to the corporatisati...
The notion of students as consumers who exercise educational decisions based on economic self-intere...
This article considers the impact of the new Consumer Rights Act 2016 and the Higher Education an...
Universities have focused on teaching and learning at a time when quality has become the marker of d...
This article challenges the practice of encouraging teacher educators to strive and raise the levels...
We present data from an exploratory qualitative interview-based pedagogical research project on the ...
This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by Taylor and Francis in Cambridge Journal of...
The global Higher Education sector (HE) is undergoing a metamorphosis. No longer is HE the sole pres...
This article is about student engagement and in particular the engagement of students in internal in...
This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Education P...
The restructuring of higher education according to neo-liberal market principles has constructed the...
Intensifying marketisation across higher education (HE) in England continues to generate critical co...
Further and higher education have witnessed something of a paradigm shift in recent years. This arti...
One could be excused for failing to recognise today’s universities as the inheritors of the global h...
the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits the unrestricted use, distribution, and repr...
In this chapter, we set out to provide an overview of recent critical responses to the corporatisati...
The notion of students as consumers who exercise educational decisions based on economic self-intere...