University of Malta. Euro-Mediterranean Centre for Educational Research
Abstract
This paper explains the activities of the Liverpool University Extension
in Israel according to a new approach that treats knowledge as an economic good
operating according to defined rules. The paper reports findings of a case study,
performed in the spirit of qualitative research that examined the Liverpool
University Extension in Israel, which offers a program toward receipt of the MA
in education and art. The purpose of the study was to investigate the Extension as
an illustration of the processes of interest. Specifically, the study attempted to
determine whether the Liverpool University Extension had adopted and applied
principles corresponding to the perception of ‘knowledge as a good’. The study,
the first of its kind regarding higher education, explores four issues: (1) the
extension’s policy, (2) its programs of study, (3) the student body (i.e.,
demographic profiles, the reasons for turning to the extension and expectations
regarding the program of study) and (4) qualitative aspects of the MA theses
submitted. The research questions ask to determine whether a relationship can be
established between these four factors and whether those relationships result from
the approach adopted (i.e. ‘knowledge as a good’).peer-reviewe