ABSTRACT

It is perhaps ironic that as the global financial crisis has, in some cases, led governments and institutions to pull back from and/or set more modest goals and associated funding around widening participation, there is an ever-growing sense that the ideals buttressing the widening participation movement are becoming more universally acknowledged by educators across the globe. That acknowledgement has translated into action on the ground via such means as policy formulation, strategic planning and target setting – each of which often reflects local contexts and manifests a regional ‘flavour’. There is also, however, an increasing realisation that there are commonalities in the challenges involved with national or regional initiatives to increase the participation of non-traditional groups in higher education and that the drivers of such initiatives – and ultimately the cohorts they target – stand to benefit considerably from an open exchange of ideas and sharing of experience.

This book brings together current regional perspectives on widening participation as presented by prominent academics, researchers, policy-makers, and students from across the globe. It will create for policy-makers, institutions, and individuals interested in enabling access, a useful and informative resource that will introduce, formulate, shape and reinforce the ideas and aims of the World Congresses on widening access.

As the contributors maintain, in an increasingly globalised market economy and in the face of recent seismic economic, political and social change around the world, it is imperative to both secure existing talent within our populations and uncover and nurture new sources of talent. The series of essays featured in this book will explore, anticipate, and highlight themes underpinning a global movement towards a step-change in thinking, strategies, and policies – one that places youth and students from around the world at its heart.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|13 pages

Connecting the unconnected

Towards a global access movement

chapter 3|13 pages

Meeting the US demand for talent

The imperative of increasing attainment for underserved populations

chapter 4|13 pages

Inequality as the key obstacle to widening successful participation in South Africa

Why Higher Education is obliged to redress it

chapter 7|12 pages

Widening participation in UK Higher Education

The institutional performance

chapter 9|13 pages

Autonomy, legitimacy and confidence

Using mainstream curriculum to successfully widen participation

chapter 10|14 pages

‘I thought I knew this stuff, but apparently I don't'

Understanding the transition into university-level thinking

chapter 12|14 pages

Students as experts

Reflections on the ‘student voice'

chapter 13|14 pages

Student voices

Student union perspectives on access, inclusion and policy-making in Higher Education

chapter |5 pages

The student voice in widening access to Higher Education in England

The case of the access agreement

chapter |5 pages

Social Dimension

A step towards a more inclusive Higher Education Area