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Students experience stories as lenses for sense-making of the transition to higher education

This study explored the experiences of seven first-year university students in Johannesburg, South Africa. Recognising storytelling as a lens to reveal identity, this study focused on student experience narratives as a tool to better understand their transition from school to university. It examined...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Perspectives in education 2024-07, Vol.42 (2), p.31-45
Main Authors: Lees, Deborah, Van Zyl, Andre
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:This study explored the experiences of seven first-year university students in Johannesburg, South Africa. Recognising storytelling as a lens to reveal identity, this study focused on student experience narratives as a tool to better understand their transition from school to university. It examined the narrated experiences of these students as a means to reveal their student identities. The qualitative study utilised a case study design type to address the research question: “What do first-year students’ transition narratives reveal about their emerging student identities?” This paper focuses on athematic analysis that was used as a tool to analyse participants’ narrated experiences. The analysis resulted in five broad themes, namely that student identities in their first-year journeys were formed and influenced by interpersonal experiences, intrapersonal experiences, pre-commencement institutional experiences, experiences of formal learning, and learning experiences beyond the classroom. Despite encountering multiple challenges in their new environment, the students derived benefit through capitalising on their personal strengths as tools to adjust to the demands of their new institution. These tools were crucial resources used by participants to adjust to and ultimately flourish in their first year.
ISSN:0258-2236
2519-593X
DOI:10.38140/pie.v42i2.7696