posted on 2015-02-17, 12:16authored byHugh Busher, Nalita James, Anna Piela, Anna-Marie Palmer
Adult learners on Access to Higher Education courses struggled with institutional and social
structures to attend their courses, but transformed their identities as learners through
them. Although asymmetrical power relationships dominated the intentional learning
communities of their courses, their work was facilitated by collaborative cultures and
supportive tutors, and students gained the confidence to construct their own emergent
communities of practice for learning. The students attended seven FE Colleges in the East
Midlands of England. Data was collected by mixed methods within a social constructivist
framework from students and their tutors.
History
Citation
British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2014, 35 (5), pp. 800-817 (18)
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCE/Institute of Lifelong Learning