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The portrayal of the role and agency of students and higher education institutions in highly ranked business school discourses

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posted on 2023-08-09, 10:52 authored by R Tamássy, Z Géring, G Király, R Plugor, M Rakovics

Purpose

This study aims to investigate how highly ranked business schools portray ideal students in terms of their attributes and their agency. Understanding how these higher education institutions (HEIs) discursively construct their present and prospective students also shed light on the institutions’ self-representation, the portrayal of the student–institution relationship and eventually the discursive construction of higher education’s (HE) role.


Design/methodology/approach

To understand this dynamic interrelationship, this study uses mixed methodological textual analysis first quantitatively identifying different modes of language use and then qualitatively analysing them.


Findings

With this approach, this study identified six language use groups. While the portrayal of the business schools and that of the students are always co-constructed, these groups differ in the extent of student and organisational agency displayed as well as the role and purpose of the institution. Business schools are always active agents in these discourses, but their roles and the students’ agency vary greatly across these six groups.


Practical implications

These findings can help practitioners determine how students are currently portrayed in their organisational texts, how their peers and competitors talk and where they want to position themselves in relation to them.


Originality/value

Previous studies discussed the ideal HE students from the perspective of the students or their educators. Other analyses on HE discourse focused on HEIs’ discursive construction and social role This study, however, unveils how the highly ranked business schools in their external organisational communication discursively construct their ideals and expectations for both their students and the general public.

Funding

This paper was prepared as part of the project “The future of business education” funded by National Research, Development and Innovation Office, Hungary (FK127972)

History

Author affiliation

Centre for Sustainable Work and Employment Futures, University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Journal of International Education in Business

Publisher

Emerald

issn

2046-469X

eissn

1836-3261

Copyright date

2023

Available date

2023-08-09

Language

en

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