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‘I always wanted to do second chance learning’: Identities and experiences of tutors on Access to HE courses
journal contribution
posted on 2015-05-07, 10:42 authored by Hugh Busher, Nalita James, A. PielaThere is a dearth of literature on Access to Higher Education (AHE) tutors which this paper
addresses. Tutors play an important part in constructing emotional and academic support for
students. Understanding their constructions of professional identity and their views of the
students they teach helps to explain the learning environments they create. The empirical
qualitative data comes from a study of AHE students’ and tutors’ views of their experiences
on AHE courses that was collected in seven rural and urban AHE providing institutions in the
East Midlands of England in 2012-2013. It was analysed using open or inductive coding to
reflect the emphases given in their interviews by participants. Emerging findings suggest that
tutors’ commitment to ‘second chance learning’ arose, in part, from their own biographies
and recognition of the disempowerment experienced by AHE students who were often
economically disadvantaged and had had negative experiences of schooling and/or a period
of work before joining the course. Tutors’ sense of agency and identity and the cultures on
AHE courses were negotiated each year through getting to know the students, meeting their
extensive demands for support, directing their teaching and learning experiences and
contesting the institutional contexts of the courses.
Funding
AimAwards, a regional Award Validating Agency (AVA), Grant No.: RS101G0098 The British Academy Grant No.: RS141G0036
History
Citation
Research in Post-Compulsory Education, 2015, 20(2), pp. 127-139Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCE/Institute of Lifelong LearningVersion
- AM (Accepted Manuscript)