UALL Widening Participation and Social Inclusion Network
Convenor: Annette Hayton, Head of Widening Participation, Goldsmiths, University of London
SRHE: Access and Widening Participation Network
Convenor: Penny-Jane Burke, Roehampton University
Venue: SRHE, 44 Bedford Way London WC1R 4LL
Date: Thursday 14th July 2011
From 1pm- 4pm (lunch available from 12:30pm)
The Ethics of Widening Participation seminar series
Ethical dilemmas in widening participation: issues of pedagogy and identity
Dr Jacqueline Stevenson, Leeds Metropolitan
For more than a decade various governmental policy initiatives have been implemented in the UK to increase the number of students attending higher education. However, whilst these initiatives have been widely critiqued there has been almost no consideration as to the ethical implications of widening participation. This is a significant omission since both WP policy and practice give rise to serious ethical concerns, not least being whether we should continue to increase access to HE at all knowing that many widening participation students are more likely to drop out, get worse degrees, graduate with higher levels of debt and be less employable post-graduation than their peers. Drawing on issues of pedagogy, student support and both staff and student identities, this presentation will act as a 'think-piece' offering an opportunity to consider the implications of widening participation from both an 'ethics of justice' and 'ethics of care' perspective.
Widening Participation and the Capability Approach
Dr Michael F. Watts, University of Cambridge
This paper uses the capability approach to address the ethics of the widening participation agenda. The capability approach de-emphasises the significance of commodities (including educational commodities) in favour of the opportunities they enable in pursuit of the good life. It demands a context-based understanding of how the socio-cultural circumstances of young people influence the real opportunities they have to recognise the value of and engage with higher education. This more nuanced engagement with the concept of well-being recognises that the inevitability of human diversity generates different realisations of the good life. It also enables engagement with the adaptation of preferences that continue to bedevil attempts to increase access to higher education. The focus on freedom, illustrated here with reference to a number of empirical studies, frames a more just approach to widening participation that is concerned with what young people have rather than what they lack.
Event booking details
To reserve a place at this seminar please email Nicola Manches at nmanches@srhe.ac.uk or telephone +44 (0) 207 4472525. Please include the name of your institution and whether you are an SRHE or UALL member.
Cost:
SRHE members: free
UALL members: £25
All Non members: £40
Payment can be made by cheque (made payable SRHE and sent to SRHE, 44 Bedford Way London WC1R 4LL ) or phone through with credit card details. Please note that places must be booked in advance and that a £25 for non attendance if a place has been reserved but no notice of cancellation/non attendance given by 7 July 2011.
Yours sincerely
Francois Smit
Society for Research into Higher Education
44 Bedford Row
London WC1R 4LL
tel: +44 20 7447 2525
fax: +44 20 7447 2526
David Andrew,
Head of Academic Practice
The Learning Institute at Queen Mary, University of London
Mile End, London E1 4NS
02078822803
02081446753
Book an appointment with me at http://doodle.com/DavidAndrew
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