Access to Higher Education: Theoretical perspectives and contemporary challenges

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How do we understand and explain who has access to higher education? How do we make sense of persisting and new forms of inequality? How can global, national and institutional policymakers and practitioners make higher education more inclusive? Access to Higher Education: Theoretical perspectives and contemporary challenges seeks to update thinking on these questions, combining new voices and emerging perspectives with established writers in the field. This pioneering text highlights the contribution of social theory to issues of access to education, with chapters introducing and drawing on the works of key interdisciplinary thinkers including Pierre Bourdieu, Margaret Archer, Amartya Sen and Herbert Simon. It then moves to examines how theoretical perspectives can be applied to the contemporary challenges of forging more equal access, with examples drawn from a wide range of contexts, including the UK, the US, Australia, South Africa and Japan. Global in scope, this book documents the shared nature of the access challenge in a period when higher education is growing rapidly, but inequalities continue to be stark. It concludes by proposing a new direction for research and a reassertion of the role of the researcher as a social activist for disconnected and disadvantaged groups, equipped with the thinking tools needed to move the agenda forward. Access to Higher Education is a rigorous text for the global research community, with relevance to policymakers, practitioners and postgraduate students interested in social justice and social policy. It provides those with an academic interest in access and a commitment to enhancing policy with theoretical and practical ideas for moving the access agenda forward in their institutional, regional or national contexts.

Author(s): Anna Mountford-Zimdars, Neil Harrison
Series: Society for Research into Higher Education (SRHE)
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2016

Language: English

Cover
Title
Copyright
Contents
Contributors
Preface
Section 1 Access to higher education
1 Global trends of access to and equity in postsecondary education
2 The stratification of opportunity in high participation systems (HPS) of higher education
Section 2 Theoretical perspectives
3 Capitals and habitus: a Bourdieusian framework for understanding transitions into higher education and student experiences
4 Explaining inequality? Rational action theories of educational decision making
5 Student choices under uncertainty: bounded rationality and behavioural economics
6 Higher education: too risky a decision?
7 Widening access with success: using the capabilities approach to confront injustices
8 Reflexivity and agency: critical realist and Archerian analyses of access and participation
Section 3 Contemporary challenges
9 Framing and making of access policies: the case of Palestinian Arabs in higher education in Israel
10 Widening access in a vast country: opportunities and challenges in Australia
11 Accessing postgraduate study in the United States for African Americans: relating the roles of family, fictive kin, faculty, and student affairs practitioners
12 Participation and access in higher education in Russia: continuity and change of a positional advantage
13 Can Holistic and Contextualised Admission (HaCA) widen access at highly selective universities? Experiences from England and the United States
14 Diversifying admissions through top-down entrance examination reform in Japanese elite universities: what is happening on the ground?
15 The mobility imperative: English students and ‘fair’ access to international higher education
Conclusion
Index