This study interviewed and evaluated the lived, everyday experiences of university students. It reveals how individuals’ thoughts and actions are guided by Bourdieu’s concept of habitus, which refers to internalized dispositions derived from past experiences. Habitus is mitigated by constraints and opportunities found within the individual’s field of play, as well as resources or capital made accessible to the individual. In so doing, this paper reveals how habitus can work to either limit or enable an individual. This leads to inequalities that are obscured due to individuals’ individualization of successes and failures within an environment that perpetuates a fair and equitable discourse of meritocracy. Over time, individuals themselves h...
Government policies in Australia aim to increase participation in higher education (Australian Gover...
In this article, we examine conceptualisations of luck evoked by a select group of elite students st...
The purpose of this paper is to delve deeper into the recent conversations that put the issue of ‘Ch...
This study interviewed and evaluated the lived, everyday experiences of university students. It reve...
This paper seeks to uncover the underlying generative principles that guide the ways of thinking in ...
Singapore’s education system enjoys widespread acclaim. Furthermore, the education apparatus plays a...
The practice of meritocracy in Singapore illustrates the belief that if one works hard and is suffic...
“Reward for Work; Work for Reward” is a fundamental principle in the Singapore education system. It ...
This article questions how meritocracy, as a state-sponsored narrative in Singapore, is variously ne...
Singapore is recognised to be one of the wealthiest countries in the world. Despite priding itself t...
Meritocracy has long been a pillar for Singapore society. In its quest to seek out the best and the ...
Meritocracy is the idea that success is based upon the merit and effort of an individual, rather tha...
Meritocracy is used by governments in many societies as an ‘effective’ way to represent social justi...
Despite meritocratic claims of equal opportunity, official statistics released by the Ministry of Ed...
To understand the educational marginality of the Malays in Singapore, this project examines the perc...
Government policies in Australia aim to increase participation in higher education (Australian Gover...
In this article, we examine conceptualisations of luck evoked by a select group of elite students st...
The purpose of this paper is to delve deeper into the recent conversations that put the issue of ‘Ch...
This study interviewed and evaluated the lived, everyday experiences of university students. It reve...
This paper seeks to uncover the underlying generative principles that guide the ways of thinking in ...
Singapore’s education system enjoys widespread acclaim. Furthermore, the education apparatus plays a...
The practice of meritocracy in Singapore illustrates the belief that if one works hard and is suffic...
“Reward for Work; Work for Reward” is a fundamental principle in the Singapore education system. It ...
This article questions how meritocracy, as a state-sponsored narrative in Singapore, is variously ne...
Singapore is recognised to be one of the wealthiest countries in the world. Despite priding itself t...
Meritocracy has long been a pillar for Singapore society. In its quest to seek out the best and the ...
Meritocracy is the idea that success is based upon the merit and effort of an individual, rather tha...
Meritocracy is used by governments in many societies as an ‘effective’ way to represent social justi...
Despite meritocratic claims of equal opportunity, official statistics released by the Ministry of Ed...
To understand the educational marginality of the Malays in Singapore, this project examines the perc...
Government policies in Australia aim to increase participation in higher education (Australian Gover...
In this article, we examine conceptualisations of luck evoked by a select group of elite students st...
The purpose of this paper is to delve deeper into the recent conversations that put the issue of ‘Ch...