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Student Attainment in Higher Education: Issues, controversies and
debates is a timely exploration of student attainment in a rapidly
changing higher education context and a rapidly changing world. The
effects of neoliberalism and the commercialization of everyday life
on education have been well documented, but with a focus on
pedagogy, whilst student success is measured through grades,
statistics and metrics. By exploring attainment in a broader
context, this book provides a unique contribution to the critical
literature on contemporary higher education. Within the themes of
understanding attainment and challenging practice, the book sets
out to explore student attainment as complex and multifaceted. It
achieves this by looking at different conceptualizations of what
attainment means and to whom; how attainment is shaped by different
and often competing agendas and vested interests. The book
highlights these wider issues, controversies and debates that
underpin student attainment, whilst at the same time engaging with
strategic and local interventions, which set out to improve aspects
of the higher education system and increase individual and social
agency within it. Sharing a range of pedagogical approaches and
interventions, some of the key topics include: addressing
attainment gaps engaging mature learners nurturing the intellectual
identity the impact of activity choices. Creating a dialogue
amongst different audiences about national and international
controversies and debates around the topic of student attainment,
this contribution will be beneficial to teaching professionals,
policymakers and strategists. As an edited collection with
contextualisation in the wider research arena, the book has both
national and international applicability and transferability.
Student Attainment in Higher Education: Issues, controversies and
debates is a timely exploration of student attainment in a rapidly
changing higher education context and a rapidly changing world. The
effects of neoliberalism and the commercialization of everyday life
on education have been well documented, but with a focus on
pedagogy, whilst student success is measured through grades,
statistics and metrics. By exploring attainment in a broader
context, this book provides a unique contribution to the critical
literature on contemporary higher education. Within the themes of
understanding attainment and challenging practice, the book sets
out to explore student attainment as complex and multifaceted. It
achieves this by looking at different conceptualizations of what
attainment means and to whom; how attainment is shaped by different
and often competing agendas and vested interests. The book
highlights these wider issues, controversies and debates that
underpin student attainment, whilst at the same time engaging with
strategic and local interventions, which set out to improve aspects
of the higher education system and increase individual and social
agency within it. Sharing a range of pedagogical approaches and
interventions, some of the key topics include: addressing
attainment gaps engaging mature learners nurturing the intellectual
identity the impact of activity choices. Creating a dialogue
amongst different audiences about national and international
controversies and debates around the topic of student attainment,
this contribution will be beneficial to teaching professionals,
policymakers and strategists. As an edited collection with
contextualisation in the wider research arena, the book has both
national and international applicability and transferability.
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