This paper contributes to a growing body of literature on widening university participation and brings a focus on the classed and embodied nature of young people’s imagination to existing discussions. We interviewed 250 young people living in disadvantaged communities across five Australian states who had experienced disengagement from compulsory primary and secondary schooling. We asked them about their education and their educational futures, specifically how they imagined universities and university participation. For these young people, universities were imagined as ‘big’, ‘massive’ alienating schools. The paper explores how the elements of schooling from which these young people disengaged became tangible barriers to imagining and purs...
The Australian Government's policy to transform higher education by 2020 includes plans to significa...
This paper explores student and teacher understandings of what it means to be \u27at risk\u27 in a N...
In England and Australia, higher education institutions are required to widen participation in highe...
This paper contributes to a growing body of literature on widening university participation and brin...
Young people with tenuous relationships to schooling and education are an enduring challenge when it...
Young people with tenuous relationships to schooling and education are an enduring challenge when it...
This thesis comprises two papers. Paper One: Previous research in relation to young people who are a...
There have been growing concerns in England about increasing numbers of students, many of whom have ...
This paper invokes the voices of young people who had been separated from mainstream schooling becau...
In neo-liberal times educational policy and practice is being realigned more closely to the shifting...
Despite the rhetoric of successive governments in England to engage all students with their learning...
For marginalised secondary school students, mainstream education may no longer appear to be an invit...
Executive Summary Higher education is in a state of massification (Sharma, 2008). More people are ac...
Universal access to elementary schooling is a goal that was largely achieved in western democracies ...
In this paper, we present findings from the second stage of a three year longitudinal study involvin...
The Australian Government's policy to transform higher education by 2020 includes plans to significa...
This paper explores student and teacher understandings of what it means to be \u27at risk\u27 in a N...
In England and Australia, higher education institutions are required to widen participation in highe...
This paper contributes to a growing body of literature on widening university participation and brin...
Young people with tenuous relationships to schooling and education are an enduring challenge when it...
Young people with tenuous relationships to schooling and education are an enduring challenge when it...
This thesis comprises two papers. Paper One: Previous research in relation to young people who are a...
There have been growing concerns in England about increasing numbers of students, many of whom have ...
This paper invokes the voices of young people who had been separated from mainstream schooling becau...
In neo-liberal times educational policy and practice is being realigned more closely to the shifting...
Despite the rhetoric of successive governments in England to engage all students with their learning...
For marginalised secondary school students, mainstream education may no longer appear to be an invit...
Executive Summary Higher education is in a state of massification (Sharma, 2008). More people are ac...
Universal access to elementary schooling is a goal that was largely achieved in western democracies ...
In this paper, we present findings from the second stage of a three year longitudinal study involvin...
The Australian Government's policy to transform higher education by 2020 includes plans to significa...
This paper explores student and teacher understandings of what it means to be \u27at risk\u27 in a N...
In England and Australia, higher education institutions are required to widen participation in highe...