That working-class ethic … where there’s a will there’s a way”: A strengths-based approach to developing employable scholars

Universities across the globe are ‘opening wide’ the doors of academe and students from increasingly diverse backgrounds are responding in their thousands. Despite the resulting increase in both student numbers and student diversity, particularly those who are the first in their families to attend u...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: O'Shea, Sarah, Delahunty, Janine
Other Authors: Diver, A
Format: Book Chapter
Published: 2019
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/77827
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author O'Shea, Sarah
Delahunty, Janine
author2 Diver, A
author_facet Diver, A
O'Shea, Sarah
Delahunty, Janine
author_sort O'Shea, Sarah
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Universities across the globe are ‘opening wide’ the doors of academe and students from increasingly diverse backgrounds are responding in their thousands. Despite the resulting increase in both student numbers and student diversity, particularly those who are the first in their families to attend university, many institutional support models continue to focus on how to ‘fill–up’ these learners with the requisite skills needed to succeed at university. However, such an approach implicitly assumes that the knowledges derived from a lived experience that does not include a family tradition of university attendance, is somehow at odds with achieving ‘success’ at university and, ultimately, employment after graduation. This chapter proposes an alternative strengths-based perspective that explores the capabilities and capitals that learners bring with them to the HE environment in order to counter such assumed deficit framing. By exploring the strengths, skills, knowledge and work ethic of first-generation students, we can begin to move away from the perception of these learners as being somehow ‘lacking’ and equally acknowledge the key role that family and friends may play in supporting them in various ways throughout their studies. Further, in acknowledging the knowledge, skills and experience that these diverse learners bring (including the resilience they likely already hold) this chapter foregrounds how students themselves can navigate this terrain and consider their post-graduation futures.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-778272020-05-04T03:46:51Z That working-class ethic … where there’s a will there’s a way”: A strengths-based approach to developing employable scholars O'Shea, Sarah Delahunty, Janine Diver, A Universities across the globe are ‘opening wide’ the doors of academe and students from increasingly diverse backgrounds are responding in their thousands. Despite the resulting increase in both student numbers and student diversity, particularly those who are the first in their families to attend university, many institutional support models continue to focus on how to ‘fill–up’ these learners with the requisite skills needed to succeed at university. However, such an approach implicitly assumes that the knowledges derived from a lived experience that does not include a family tradition of university attendance, is somehow at odds with achieving ‘success’ at university and, ultimately, employment after graduation. This chapter proposes an alternative strengths-based perspective that explores the capabilities and capitals that learners bring with them to the HE environment in order to counter such assumed deficit framing. By exploring the strengths, skills, knowledge and work ethic of first-generation students, we can begin to move away from the perception of these learners as being somehow ‘lacking’ and equally acknowledge the key role that family and friends may play in supporting them in various ways throughout their studies. Further, in acknowledging the knowledge, skills and experience that these diverse learners bring (including the resilience they likely already hold) this chapter foregrounds how students themselves can navigate this terrain and consider their post-graduation futures. 2019 Book Chapter http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/77827 10.1007/978-3-030-26342-3_11 restricted
spellingShingle O'Shea, Sarah
Delahunty, Janine
That working-class ethic … where there’s a will there’s a way”: A strengths-based approach to developing employable scholars
title That working-class ethic … where there’s a will there’s a way”: A strengths-based approach to developing employable scholars
title_full That working-class ethic … where there’s a will there’s a way”: A strengths-based approach to developing employable scholars
title_fullStr That working-class ethic … where there’s a will there’s a way”: A strengths-based approach to developing employable scholars
title_full_unstemmed That working-class ethic … where there’s a will there’s a way”: A strengths-based approach to developing employable scholars
title_short That working-class ethic … where there’s a will there’s a way”: A strengths-based approach to developing employable scholars
title_sort that working-class ethic … where there’s a will there’s a way”: a strengths-based approach to developing employable scholars
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/77827