Economic uncertainties have unsettled the status of higher education as an assured means to social mobility, raising questions of how students orient themselves to life after graduation. In this context, how does religion (a neglected aspect of student identity) shape students' attitudes and plans? This article examines the future aspirations of Christian students, theorising Christian identity as an inter-subjective resource through which 'alternative' futures are imagined, a resource variously framed by classed assumptions about propriety. It analyses data from 75 interviews with undergraduates at five English universities, and explores emerging aspirational paradigms structured around hetero-normative domesticity, the formation of Christ...
While many Christian colleges and universities in the United States have lost their religious charac...
This study employs multi-level linear statistical modelling to examine the power of school-level and...
This paper begins with a typological discussion of students at Catholic colleges and universiti...
This chapter is about the relationship between higher education and the religious identities of uni...
This chapter is concerned with expressions of Christian identity among university students, asking h...
This article explores how religion shapes approaches to gender amongst university students in the Un...
This article explores how religion shapes approaches to gender amongst university students in the Un...
Every few years, evangelical scholars publish volumes addressing the nature of how their faith inter...
This article argues for a certain kind of pluralism in the context of the secular university that wo...
This research article explores how two English universities with Anglican foundations responded to U...
Thesis (Ed. D.)--University of Rochester. Margaret Warner Graduate School of Education and Human Dev...
This article explores the formation of British evangelical university students as believers. Drawing...
The new independent Christian schools developed by parents and evangelical churches in the United Ki...
The awareness of secularisation may not have served as a focus for curricula development in theologi...
This article explores the formation of British evangelical university students as believers. Drawing...
While many Christian colleges and universities in the United States have lost their religious charac...
This study employs multi-level linear statistical modelling to examine the power of school-level and...
This paper begins with a typological discussion of students at Catholic colleges and universiti...
This chapter is about the relationship between higher education and the religious identities of uni...
This chapter is concerned with expressions of Christian identity among university students, asking h...
This article explores how religion shapes approaches to gender amongst university students in the Un...
This article explores how religion shapes approaches to gender amongst university students in the Un...
Every few years, evangelical scholars publish volumes addressing the nature of how their faith inter...
This article argues for a certain kind of pluralism in the context of the secular university that wo...
This research article explores how two English universities with Anglican foundations responded to U...
Thesis (Ed. D.)--University of Rochester. Margaret Warner Graduate School of Education and Human Dev...
This article explores the formation of British evangelical university students as believers. Drawing...
The new independent Christian schools developed by parents and evangelical churches in the United Ki...
The awareness of secularisation may not have served as a focus for curricula development in theologi...
This article explores the formation of British evangelical university students as believers. Drawing...
While many Christian colleges and universities in the United States have lost their religious charac...
This study employs multi-level linear statistical modelling to examine the power of school-level and...
This paper begins with a typological discussion of students at Catholic colleges and universiti...