This is a the final draft of the article post refereeing. The published version can be found by followig the DOI link.We provide an analysis of some recent widening participation literature concerning the barriers preventing non-traditional students accessing higher education. This literature criticizes higher education institutions and staff, opening up the academics' attitudes and skills to inquiry. We follow the genesis of four themes in the literature and these are visited in turn to provide substantive arguments. Students' accounts of their experiences are taken as if they were a systematic analysis of higher education institutions and result in an individualistic analysis of the problems related to access and progression. Beck describ...
'Widening participation' and 'fair access' have been contested policy areas in English higher educat...
In England and Wales, the introduction of £9,250 Higher Education tuition fees and concern more broa...
Despite well documented and persistent inequalities in access to higher education (HE), the evidenc...
This paper explores the conflicting philosophies within the widening participation debate. Two categ...
The central contention of the article is that access to higher education (HE) may be increasingly be...
Non-traditional students who have no history in the field of higher education (HE) in the UK, and ha...
In this article, we draw on evidence from a large-scale research project to explore the metaphorical...
Higher Education is framed as something that should benefit the many opposed to the few. This is emp...
Research into widening participation has considered both the barriers to participation and the exper...
This article reports on institutional research at two contrasting UK universities, each with differe...
Despite significant public investment in the sector, selective universities in the UK have made litt...
In this paper, we draw on evidence from our current research to revisit the metaphorical concept of ...
In England and Wales, the introduction of £9,250 Higher Education tuition fees and concern more broa...
Widening education participation and social inclusion have been central concerns in lifelong and hig...
There is no shortage of literature addressing the range of reasons why more disadvantaged groups are...
'Widening participation' and 'fair access' have been contested policy areas in English higher educat...
In England and Wales, the introduction of £9,250 Higher Education tuition fees and concern more broa...
Despite well documented and persistent inequalities in access to higher education (HE), the evidenc...
This paper explores the conflicting philosophies within the widening participation debate. Two categ...
The central contention of the article is that access to higher education (HE) may be increasingly be...
Non-traditional students who have no history in the field of higher education (HE) in the UK, and ha...
In this article, we draw on evidence from a large-scale research project to explore the metaphorical...
Higher Education is framed as something that should benefit the many opposed to the few. This is emp...
Research into widening participation has considered both the barriers to participation and the exper...
This article reports on institutional research at two contrasting UK universities, each with differe...
Despite significant public investment in the sector, selective universities in the UK have made litt...
In this paper, we draw on evidence from our current research to revisit the metaphorical concept of ...
In England and Wales, the introduction of £9,250 Higher Education tuition fees and concern more broa...
Widening education participation and social inclusion have been central concerns in lifelong and hig...
There is no shortage of literature addressing the range of reasons why more disadvantaged groups are...
'Widening participation' and 'fair access' have been contested policy areas in English higher educat...
In England and Wales, the introduction of £9,250 Higher Education tuition fees and concern more broa...
Despite well documented and persistent inequalities in access to higher education (HE), the evidenc...