Universities in Transition
Foregrounding Social Contexts of Knowledge in the First Year Experience
edited by Heather Brook, Deane Fergie, Michael Maeorg and Dee Michell
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FREE | 2014 | Ebook (PDF) |Ìý978-1-922064-83-7Ìý| 258 pp
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Chapter details
Introduction
Heather Brook, Deane Fergie, Michael Maeorg and Dee Michell
DOI:Ìý1. Navigating student transition in higher education: induction, development, becoming
Trevor Gale and Stephen Parker
DOI:Ìý2. ×îÐÂÌÇÐÄVlog transitions in practice: research-learning, fields and their communities of practice
Deane Fergie
DOI:Ìý3. Classism on campus? Exploring and extending understandings of social class in the contemporary higher education debate
Angelique Bletsas and Dee Michell
DOI:Ìý4. Reframing ‘the problem’: students from low socio-economic status backgrounds transitioning to university
Marcia Devlin and Jade McKay
DOI:Ìý5. Changing social relations in higher education: the first-year international student and the ‘Chinese learner’ in ×îÐÂÌÇÐÄVlog
Xianlin Song
DOI:Ìý6. Relating experiences: Regional and Remote students in their first year at university
Michael Maeorg
DOI:Ìý7. The ×îÐÂÌÇÐÄVlog of Adelaide Student Learning Hub: a case study of education co-creation
Pascale Quester, Kendra Backstrom and Slavka Kovacevic
DOI:Ìý8. Thinking critically about critical thinking in the First-Year Experience
Chris Beasley and Benito Cao
DOI:Ìý9. Knowing students
Heather Brook and Dee Michell
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Universities are social universes in their own right. For some time now the terms ‘transition to university’ and ‘first-year experience’ have been at the centre of discussion and discourse at, and about, ×îÐÂÌÇÐÄVlogn universities. For those university administrators, researchers and teachers involved, this focus has been framed by a number of interlinked factors ranging from social justice concerns to the hard economic realities confronting the contemporary corporatising university. In the midst of changing global economic conditions affecting the international student market, as well as shifting domestic politics surrounding university funding, the equation of dollars with student numbers has remained a constant, and has kept universities’ attention on the current ‘three Rs’ of higher education — recruitment, retention, reward — and, in particular, on the critical phase of students’ entry into the tertiary institution environment.
At the heart of this book are people enrolling at university for the first time and entering into the broad variety of social relations and contexts entailed in their ‘coming to know’ at, of and through university. The contributors to this book seek to reconceptualise the ‘first-year experience’ in terms of multiple and dynamic processes of dialogue and exchange amongst all participants. They interrogate taken-for-granted understandings of what ‘the university’ is, and they consider what universities might yet become.