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Thinking ‘spatially’ about ‘belonging’, retention and the first year experience Kate Thomas European First Year Experience Conference 2015, Bergen Challenge Workshop: Tuesday 16 June 2015, Parallel Session 5
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workshop aim to introduce two research methods used to investigate spatial dimensions of belonging on campus for part-time, mature undergraduates (in English HE)
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workshop outline research context key concepts activity: crossing campus Mapping Belonging and Campus Dérive questions/discussion
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research context research into part-time, mature undergraduates, retention and the discourse of ‘belonging’ in English higher education (HE) multiple case study: 4 English HEIs delivering face-to-face part-time provision (2014-15) the discourse of ‘belonging’ in retention literature and institutional approaches – a dominant but problematic narrative for part-time, mature undergraduates (in English HE)
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dominant practices of ‘belonging’ in HE academic: disciplinary/programme/cohort social: sports/enrichment/voluntary/leisure presence on campus/outside contact hours validated in literature, websites, institutional strategy ‘typical’ student, assumptions about engagement with HE
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key research questions how is belonging defined, experienced, imagined? By the institution? By staff? By students? what spaces/places do part-time, mature students occupy/create for learning, sociality, development? what happens when ‘belonging’ is interrogated through space, power and identity?
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activity: crossing campus 1. use a coloured pen to map your route around the conference venue today (or yesterday) 2. mark anywhere you particularly liked or disliked or remember – and why 3. briefly share your map and your thoughts and observations with your neighbour(s). how might this research method uncover spatial dimensions of belonging?
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methods mapping belonging (from development studies research) student workshop exercise with campus map visual activity to capture spatial dimensions of ‘belonging’ for part- time, mature undergraduates * site-specific * engaging with physical campus/spatial relationships (student) * transcribing landscape – paper documents/photo/commentary campus dèrive (from pyschogeographical practice) conducted by researcher – ‘walking as narrative’ influenced by ethnography – ‘making the familiar strange’ * site-specific * engaging with physical campus/spatial relationships (researcher) * transcribing landscape – research journal, case study report
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mapping belonging
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outcomes how is belonging defined, experienced, imagined by students? dimensions of belonging: centre, cohort, programme, virtual, imaginary what spaces/places do part-time, mature students occupy on campus? marginal/peripheral/dark/empty time-poverty limits physical/affective engagement with institution Student Unions, gyms, libraries, societies, bars - rarely used interrogating ‘belonging’ through space, power and identity? dominant narrative of belonging modelled on FT, young students PT students – in deficit – different AND absent belonging is relational in structured social space of HE belonging is complex, not uniform, negotiated, based on relations of power
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thank you kate.thomas@sps.bbk.ac.uk
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