The landscape of higher education has undergone change & transformation in recent years partly as a result of diversification & massification. However persistent patterns of under-representation continue to perplex policy-makers & practitioners raising questions about current strategies policies & approaches to widening participation. Presenting a comprehensive review & critique of contemporary widening participation policy & practice Penny Jane Burke interrogates the underpinning assumptions values & perspectives shaping current concepts & understandings of widening participation. She draws on a range of perspectives within the field of the sociology of education
- including feminist post-structuralism critical pedagogy & policy sociology
- to examine the ways in which wider societal inequalities & misrecognitions which are related to difference & diversity present particular challenges for the project to widen participation in higher education. In particular the book: focuses on the themes of difference & diversity to shed light on the operations of inequalities & the politics of access & participation both in terms of national & institutional policy & at the level of student & practitioner experience. draws on the insights of the sociology of education to consider not only the patterns of under-representation in higher education but also the politics of mis-representation critiquing key discourses of widening participation. interrogates assumptions behind WP policy & practice including assumptions about education being an unassailable good provides an analysis of the accounts & perspectives of students practitioners & policy-makers through in-depth interviews observations & reflective journal entries. offers insights for future developments in the policy practice & strategies for widening participation The book will be of great use to all those working in & researching Higher Education.