9 research outputs found

    Enhancing the undergraduate student expereince via fund raising partnerships. An action research project

    Get PDF
    This project was developed from practitioner action research and considers the impact of integrating fund-raising activities into the formal curriculum with a target group of undergraduate students. The main aim of this project was to evaluate the impact of developing fund-raising activities as an integral aspect at both module and programme level, grounded within practitioner action research. A core component of this aim was to develop value added structures into established modules to support the student experience and student identity. Furthermore the project sought to broaden, develop and strengthen links with the local wider community recognising the value such interactions can bring. Finally the project set out to develop integration opportunities between the students and organisations in order to develop the students’ awareness of workforce options as future professionals. This study is based within one post-1992 Higher Education Institution (HEI) and consisted of three inter-related but distinct phases. The project involved 60 students during phase one building to some 200 students by phase three. The findings suggest fund-raising activities built into the formal curriculum can be a useful medium for promoting student identity whilst providing a ‘value-added’ component to existing programmes of study

    AIDS, the "other plague": a history of AIDS prevention education in Vancouver, 1983-1994

    No full text
    This study describes how AIDS prevention education programs were constructed, delivered, and implemented in Vancouver between 1983 and 1994. Biodeterministic models of disease are examined through a historical analysis of documents that include newsletters, minutes of board meetings, policy reviews, annual reports, and personal journals. This study assumes that AIDS is as much a sociocultural phenomenon as it is biological. The findings suggest that present educational guidelines for AIDS prevention are unable to identify what messages should be communicated and fail to identify to whom they should be conveyed. This study does not recommend the use of biodeterministic models of AIDS prevention education which reflect plague metaphors. Instead, culturally relevant strategies need to be developed throughout all aspects of AIDS prevention curricula.Education, Faculty ofEducational Studies (EDST), Department ofGraduat

    Employing Bourdieu’s notion of habitus and capital to Investigate the international student experience within the field of higher education

    No full text
    This thesis explored the interplay of capital and habitus during the acculturation process of international students whilst studying in HE institutions in one geographical area. It examined how they employed capital and habitus in their new multicultural context to determine whether they were passive recipients or active participants in the field of UK Higher Education. It sought to question the culturally diverse learners’ experiences with respect to their studying and living conditions in the UK; how personal and situational variables affected their early adjustment processes; how they adjusted to the classroom and university experience, and to life in the local community. The purpose of the thesis is to build theory in relation to how international students immerse themselves in new contexts and to use this theory to support or challenge current educational discourses in the area of intercultural competency in Higher Education. The research was carried out across three Higher Education institutions which were located in one geographical area. It uses data generated from semi-structured interviews with thirty students enrolled in the Business Administration, Applied Science and Engineering, and Medical and Health schools which have the highest enrolments of international students. Bourdieu’s notions of habitus and capital were used as a novel lens through which to view the international student experience. Interpretivist hermeneutics were used in the analysis of the data. The main finding is that capital and habitus does lead to international student inclusion or exclusion within Higher Education provision. The findings indicate that the international students’ did actively use their capital and habitus to realise their goals in spite of barriers imposed by social and cultural reproduction. The new dispositions are as a result of developing capitals and habitus that is distinctive to each individual. There is often a dissonance between the primary and secondary habitus embodied in the individual, which leads to new identities and agency. The international students’ utilise strategic agency to develop their capital and habitus. This confirms capital and habitus leads to active participation in the international student experience. The findings suggests further investigation of current international education policy and practice as currently international students are not contributing towards the internationalisation of universities, rather it is the international students who are becoming internationally competent and diversity is being contained. Dialogue to promote intercultural understanding between international students and home-based students is not widely occurring. This suggests that opportunities to develop intercultural competencies are not being fully accommodated or recognised with current Higher Education policy priorities regarding internationalisation at home. In spite of marginalisation within the universities and the communities, the international students are developing comparative and international perspectives and intercultural competencies through their experiences. Educators must acknowledge and respond to the dissonance as well as the cultural and linguistic diversity of the communities they serve if they want to encourage dialogue and reciprocity to develop intercultural competencies

    Promoting Inclusive Practice

    No full text

    Mesoproterozoic plume-modified orogenesis in eastern Precambrian Australia

    No full text
    corecore