The impact of the changing English higher education marketplace on widening participation and fair access: evidence from a discourse analysis of access agreements
This article uses a discourse analysis of access policy statements to trace the impact of differentiation and marketisation among English HE institutions that was evident before but accelerated by recent policy developments, including the increase in tuition fees. A result of this has
been a shift in institutions' policy discourses that indicate less propitious circumstances for widening participation, particularly among post-1992 institutions which are now expected to improve retention and employability outcomes. Pre-1992 institutions including members of the Russell Group
of selective, research intensive universities have been encouraged by policy changes to differentiate further by concentrating their outreach only on the 'brightest' of applicants from poorer backgrounds. The article concludes that widening participation of the traditional 'raising aspirations'
kind becomes a much more difficult project for post-1992 institutions and correspondingly a more difficult basis for a future business model.
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Keywords: DIFFERENTIATION; FAIR ACCESS; MARKETISATION; NATIONAL SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAMME; OFFICE FOR FAIR ACCESS; WIDENING PARTICIPATION
Document Type: Research Article
Publication date: 01 March 2015
- The journal is based on the belief that there are neglected links between research and theory, and policy and practice in the promotion of widening participation in post-compulsory education and lifelong learning. It aims to provide a forum for the development of theory, the addressing of policy questions and the dissemination of innovative practice in the field of widening participation and lifelong learning.
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