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'It's quite difficult letting them go, isn't it?' UK parents' experiences of their child's higher education choice process
This paper challenges the dominant discourse that Higher Education (HE) choice is a consumer choice and questions assumptions underpinning government policy and HE marketing. HE choice is largely viewed as a rational, decontextualised process. However, this interpretivist study found it to be much m...
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Published in: | Studies in higher education (Dorchester-on-Thames) 2018-12, Vol.43 (12), p.2161-2175 |
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container_title | Studies in higher education (Dorchester-on-Thames) |
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creator | Haywood, Helen Scullion, Richard |
description | This paper challenges the dominant discourse that Higher Education (HE) choice is a consumer choice and questions assumptions underpinning government policy and HE marketing. HE choice is largely viewed as a rational, decontextualised process. However, this interpretivist study found it to be much more complex, and to be about relationships and managing a transition in roles. It focuses on parents, an under-researched group, who play an increasing part in their child's HE choice. It finds that they experience this process primarily as parents, not consumers and that their desire to maintain the relationship at this critical juncture takes precedence over the choice of particular courses and universities. The role of relationships, and in this context relationship maintenance, is the main theme. This is experienced in two principal ways: relationship maintenance through conflict avoidance and through teamwork. These significant findings have implications for the way governments and universities consider recruitment. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1080/03075079.2017.1315084 |
format | article |
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language | eng |
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source | International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); ERIC; Taylor and Francis Social Sciences and Humanities Collection |
subjects | Child Rearing Children choice College Choice Conflict Consumers Critical junctures decision-making Experience Foreign Countries Higher education Marketing marketisation Parent Attitudes Parent Student Relationship parents Parents & parenting Recruitment Teamwork |
title | 'It's quite difficult letting them go, isn't it?' UK parents' experiences of their child's higher education choice process |
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