Record

StorageSiteUCL Institute of Education
LevelFile
Reference Number TLRP/3/21
Title'Non-Participation in HE: decision-making as an embedded social practice'
Date2005
DescriptionA project file from the Widening Participation in HE phase led by Dr A Fuller containing a funding application, reviewers' comments and correspondence.
Extent1 folder
AdminHistoryProject Summary taken from the TLRP website.

'This study examined the extent to which HE is conceived as 'within the bounds of the possible' for non-participants and explored how attitudes to HE and decisions about non-participation are embedded within 'networks of intimacy' consisting of family members and close friends. It hypothesised that such networks provide a critical context within which individuals' thinking about participation is embedded. The research involved two overlapping and interacting parts: stage one (desk work) drew on existing large-scale survey data to develop a macro-level account of (non-)participation in the general population and a critique of the extant literature on educational decision-making. The implications of the emerging issues were explored in the qualitative study (stage two).This involved case studies of sixteen networks of intimacy. We identified non-participating adults at different stages in the life-course to provide 'entry points' to each network. Focusing on non-participants helped to generate evidence from networks with a spectrum of attitudes to and experience of HE, as well as from a variety of socio-economic backgrounds. Each case study was conducted in two parts: an initial structured interview with each 'entry point' individual to determine educational and employment histories, household and family composition, and details of their self-defined network of intimacy, followed by semi-structured interviews with each of these individuals plus five or six members of their network who were identified as sources of influence in the decision-making process. The focus at the macro and micro levels on non-participants and on adults at various stages in the life-course make this research distinctive, as existing research has tended to focus on non-traditional participants, and applicants and on adults below the age of 30'.
AccessStatusRestricted access
AccessConditionsAccess to some papers in the file is restricted under the Data Protection Act 1998. Please contact the archives for further information.
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