This paper uses critical discourse analysis of English higher education institutions’ policy statements about access to explore the changing ways that institutions have used language to shift their market positionality away from widening participation for all and the process of higher education to ‘fair access’ (i.e. social mobility for the ‘brightest’) and the outcome of producing ‘professionals’. Analysis is drawn from the Access Agreements two sets of sampled institutions (ten large prestigious pre-1992 universities and ten former polytechnics, known as post-1992 universities ) at two points in time: 2006-07 (the first wave of Access Agreements) and 2012-13 (the first set of Access Agreements in the new funding regime)
This article critically analyses the impact of reforms to the student financial support system in En...
There is a growing body of evidence to support the notion that that English higher education institu...
Higher Education is framed as something that should benefit the many opposed to the few. This is emp...
This article uses a discourse analysis of access policy statements to trace the impact of differenti...
This paper explores English universities’ responses to widening participation policy developments. I...
This paper argues that the introduction of access agreements following the establishment of the Offi...
This chapter presents an alternative view of marketised higher education form much of this volume: n...
Despite significant public investment in the sector, selective universities in the UK have made litt...
This article explores how higher education institutions in England engage with research in their acc...
The thesis is a study of how notions of access, participation and mobility are represented in four s...
This paper argues that the introduction of access agreements following the establishment of the Offi...
This article explores how higher education institutions in England engage with research in their acc...
An analysis was conducted of the OFFA Access agreements and university publicity of eight universiti...
This article explores how higher education institutions in England engage with research in their acc...
This thesis is based upon a case study of six higher education institutions (HEIs) and their ‘framin...
This article critically analyses the impact of reforms to the student financial support system in En...
There is a growing body of evidence to support the notion that that English higher education institu...
Higher Education is framed as something that should benefit the many opposed to the few. This is emp...
This article uses a discourse analysis of access policy statements to trace the impact of differenti...
This paper explores English universities’ responses to widening participation policy developments. I...
This paper argues that the introduction of access agreements following the establishment of the Offi...
This chapter presents an alternative view of marketised higher education form much of this volume: n...
Despite significant public investment in the sector, selective universities in the UK have made litt...
This article explores how higher education institutions in England engage with research in their acc...
The thesis is a study of how notions of access, participation and mobility are represented in four s...
This paper argues that the introduction of access agreements following the establishment of the Offi...
This article explores how higher education institutions in England engage with research in their acc...
An analysis was conducted of the OFFA Access agreements and university publicity of eight universiti...
This article explores how higher education institutions in England engage with research in their acc...
This thesis is based upon a case study of six higher education institutions (HEIs) and their ‘framin...
This article critically analyses the impact of reforms to the student financial support system in En...
There is a growing body of evidence to support the notion that that English higher education institu...
Higher Education is framed as something that should benefit the many opposed to the few. This is emp...