Student–faculty partnership has been researched by contemporary academic developers, particularly its outcomes and challenges. However, theoretical discussions linking it with larger social–educational–political discourses are still lacking. This reflection aims to help fill the gap by analysing how student–faculty partnership might contest the neoliberalisation of higher education. It argues that, by positioning partnership as the basis for learning, student–faculty partnership provides an alternative discourse to contest the marketisation and corporatisation of higher education, the (re)production of learners as competitive and self-interested, and the standardisation and mechanisation of learning
This paper, based on the reflections of two academic social scientists, offers a starting point for ...
Focusing primarily upon the higher education policies of the Coalition government of 2010-15, this p...
This article reflects upon the neoliberalisation of higher education and its effects on teaching pra...
Student–faculty partnership has been researched by contemporary academic developers, particularly it...
The current operating context for higher education in the UK is of neoliberal consumerism ...
The idea of student-staff partnership working is becoming increasingly popular in higher education. ...
This chapter analyses the development of a large institutional partnership scheme in order to demons...
This article examines the nature of an on-going educational partnership between a Higher Education i...
There has been an increase in research and practice exploring how students can gain agency to shape ...
This paper discusses how dominant discourses of neoliberalism intersect with teaching and learning p...
This Chapter builds three inter-related arguments about the impacts of neoliberalism within higher e...
[The article had no abstract; the following text is drawn from the Introduction and Conclusion.] ...
Since the neoliberal reforms to British education in the 1980s, education debates have been saturate...
This thesis considers the possibilities for educational partnerships for social justice in a context...
In this paper I draw on ethnographic observation data taken from a school-based study of two groups ...
This paper, based on the reflections of two academic social scientists, offers a starting point for ...
Focusing primarily upon the higher education policies of the Coalition government of 2010-15, this p...
This article reflects upon the neoliberalisation of higher education and its effects on teaching pra...
Student–faculty partnership has been researched by contemporary academic developers, particularly it...
The current operating context for higher education in the UK is of neoliberal consumerism ...
The idea of student-staff partnership working is becoming increasingly popular in higher education. ...
This chapter analyses the development of a large institutional partnership scheme in order to demons...
This article examines the nature of an on-going educational partnership between a Higher Education i...
There has been an increase in research and practice exploring how students can gain agency to shape ...
This paper discusses how dominant discourses of neoliberalism intersect with teaching and learning p...
This Chapter builds three inter-related arguments about the impacts of neoliberalism within higher e...
[The article had no abstract; the following text is drawn from the Introduction and Conclusion.] ...
Since the neoliberal reforms to British education in the 1980s, education debates have been saturate...
This thesis considers the possibilities for educational partnerships for social justice in a context...
In this paper I draw on ethnographic observation data taken from a school-based study of two groups ...
This paper, based on the reflections of two academic social scientists, offers a starting point for ...
Focusing primarily upon the higher education policies of the Coalition government of 2010-15, this p...
This article reflects upon the neoliberalisation of higher education and its effects on teaching pra...