This paper first argues for the importance of continued analysis of marketising discourses in Higher Education (HE), both despite and because of their ubiquity. Secondly, the paper looks specifically at college-based HE provision in English Further Education (FE). Using the ‘possible selves’ concept alongside critical discourse analysis, the paper analyses the representations of prospective students on marketing web pages for HE provision in FE colleges. Arguing that the web pages reveal more than just the limited language of HE marketing strategy, the paper highlights common representations of the college-based HE student across policy, research and marketing sources. By exploring both the celebratory and the limiting nature of these repre...
This article investigates the ways in which students are constructed in contemporary English higher ...
The overall aim of this thesis was to consider and critically analyse the discourses that shape stud...
In this paper we express concerns that the marketisation of British higher education that has accomp...
‘Students as consumers’ has become the dominant discourse applied to English undergraduate students ...
It is now widely assumed in England – by academics and social commentators alike – that, as a result...
This article traces how students are represented in undergraduate prospectuses from 1998 to 2021 by ...
As higher education (HE) has come to be valued for its contribution to the global economy, prioritie...
Post-compulsory education in England is divided into two sectors: one for higher education (HE) and ...
In this chapter, we draw on an analysis of English policy documents and focus groups with students a...
Measures that economise education are typically accompanied by discourses that prime society for cha...
International education is impacted by multiple discourses, in particular the discourse of universi...
Udgivelsesdato: DECThis paper is a contribution to the existing debate about the marketization of hi...
Both ‗marketing‘ and ‗marketisation‘ are features of the UK Higher Education (HE) sector. Whilst the...
We are entering uncharted waters within the world of higher education (HE) in the UK. Recent changes...
This chapter provides the context for understanding how English widening participation (WP) policy h...
This article investigates the ways in which students are constructed in contemporary English higher ...
The overall aim of this thesis was to consider and critically analyse the discourses that shape stud...
In this paper we express concerns that the marketisation of British higher education that has accomp...
‘Students as consumers’ has become the dominant discourse applied to English undergraduate students ...
It is now widely assumed in England – by academics and social commentators alike – that, as a result...
This article traces how students are represented in undergraduate prospectuses from 1998 to 2021 by ...
As higher education (HE) has come to be valued for its contribution to the global economy, prioritie...
Post-compulsory education in England is divided into two sectors: one for higher education (HE) and ...
In this chapter, we draw on an analysis of English policy documents and focus groups with students a...
Measures that economise education are typically accompanied by discourses that prime society for cha...
International education is impacted by multiple discourses, in particular the discourse of universi...
Udgivelsesdato: DECThis paper is a contribution to the existing debate about the marketization of hi...
Both ‗marketing‘ and ‗marketisation‘ are features of the UK Higher Education (HE) sector. Whilst the...
We are entering uncharted waters within the world of higher education (HE) in the UK. Recent changes...
This chapter provides the context for understanding how English widening participation (WP) policy h...
This article investigates the ways in which students are constructed in contemporary English higher ...
The overall aim of this thesis was to consider and critically analyse the discourses that shape stud...
In this paper we express concerns that the marketisation of British higher education that has accomp...