Positioning Home for Resilience on Campus: First-Generation Students Negotiate Powerless/full Conditions in South African Higher Education

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25159/1947-9417/3602

Keywords:

identity, power, agency, belonging, practice-based, art and design

Abstract

Recognising the authoritative de/legitimising power of education systems, this paper contributes to studies concerned with the ways in which new entrants to higher education experience the positioning of their inherited identities as they negotiate their transition to campus life. The findings emerged during a broader psychosocial study of the transitions of seven first-generation students at a technical university in South Africa. The nature of their self-positioning was explored through an analysis of the positioning statements they articulated during photo-elicitation interviews. The university was positioned as a powerful institution, with conditions for both opportunity and alienation. Participants strongly identified with the professional community of practice in Art and Design. However, in relation to the urban campus context, the majority of participants positioned aspects of their home communities as deficit. A case is made for creating conducive conditions that enable self-reflection on students’ transitional experiences and develop collective critical consciousness.

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Author Biographies

Andrea Alcock, Durban University of Technology

DUT Writing Centre - City Campus

Writing Centre Practitioner

Andrea Alcock runs a writing centre on the arts and design campus of the Durban University of Technology. This study brings together her interests in educational justice and development as she works primarily with first generation students.

Dina Zoe Belluigi, Queen's University, Belfast

School of Social Sciences, Education and Social Work.

Coordinator of an international portfolio of programmes in Higher Education Studies

Dr. Dina Belluigi is an academic in critical Higher Education Studies, whose research interests and methodologies grapple with agency, authorship and equity in higher education.


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Published

2018-07-17

How to Cite

Alcock, Andrea, and Dina Zoe Belluigi. 2018. “Positioning Home for Resilience on Campus: First-Generation Students Negotiate Powerless/Full Conditions in South African Higher Education”. Education As Change 22 (1):27 pages. https://doi.org/10.25159/1947-9417/3602.

Issue

Section

Articles
Received 2017-12-04
Accepted 2018-05-21
Published 2018-07-17