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An investigation into the relationship between student identity and academic literacy at a private higher education institution

Although academic development programmes have been well researched in the South African context, much of the research has focused on programmes at mainstream public universities and less is known about the programmes run by smaller private institutions. This research aims to identify and discuss the...

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Main Author: Pearton, Nicola
Other Authors: Thesen, Lucia
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: School of Education 2019
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access_status_str Open Access
author Pearton, Nicola
author2 Thesen, Lucia
author_browse Pearton, Nicola
Thesen, Lucia
author_facet Thesen, Lucia
Pearton, Nicola
author_sort Pearton, Nicola
collection Thesis
description Although academic development programmes have been well researched in the South African context, much of the research has focused on programmes at mainstream public universities and less is known about the programmes run by smaller private institutions. This research aims to identify and discuss themes around student identity and how these themes relate to academic literacy acquisition for students on a one-year bridging course programme at a private university. Gee’s (2001) identity framework is used to explore and compare how students on a bridging course were viewed by the institution, and how these students saw themselves. An analysis of data gathered through interviews, focus groups, questionnaires, and course-related materials revealed a strong deficit discourse around students on the bridging course. The institution’s view of literacy as autonomous, the deficit discourse surrounding the students, and the way these students were positioned in the institution, meant that students, although highly motivated to achieve a degree qualification, had not begun to develop the beginning of either an academic or a vocational identity. The institution did not successfully enable students to view academic practice and discourse as part of their identity, and as a result bridging course students did not adopt the practices and discourses around academic literacy as they were not convinced of their validity and legitimacy. Given that academic literacy is central to success on a degree programme, these students were not adequately prepared for their first year of degree study. The findings from this research show the need for wider research into whether academic development programmes at private institutions are really meeting the needs of the students who enrol onto these programmes.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2019
publishDateRange 2019
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/29697 An investigation into the relationship between student identity and academic literacy at a private higher education institution Pearton, Nicola Thesen, Lucia Education Although academic development programmes have been well researched in the South African context, much of the research has focused on programmes at mainstream public universities and less is known about the programmes run by smaller private institutions. This research aims to identify and discuss themes around student identity and how these themes relate to academic literacy acquisition for students on a one-year bridging course programme at a private university. Gee’s (2001) identity framework is used to explore and compare how students on a bridging course were viewed by the institution, and how these students saw themselves. An analysis of data gathered through interviews, focus groups, questionnaires, and course-related materials revealed a strong deficit discourse around students on the bridging course. The institution’s view of literacy as autonomous, the deficit discourse surrounding the students, and the way these students were positioned in the institution, meant that students, although highly motivated to achieve a degree qualification, had not begun to develop the beginning of either an academic or a vocational identity. The institution did not successfully enable students to view academic practice and discourse as part of their identity, and as a result bridging course students did not adopt the practices and discourses around academic literacy as they were not convinced of their validity and legitimacy. Given that academic literacy is central to success on a degree programme, these students were not adequately prepared for their first year of degree study. The findings from this research show the need for wider research into whether academic development programmes at private institutions are really meeting the needs of the students who enrol onto these programmes. 2019-02-19T13:51:09Z 2019-02-19T13:51:09Z 2018 2019-02-19T08:43:17Z Master Thesis Masters MEd http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29697 eng application/pdf School of Education Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Education
Pearton, Nicola
An investigation into the relationship between student identity and academic literacy at a private higher education institution
thesis_degree_str Master's
title An investigation into the relationship between student identity and academic literacy at a private higher education institution
title_full An investigation into the relationship between student identity and academic literacy at a private higher education institution
title_fullStr An investigation into the relationship between student identity and academic literacy at a private higher education institution
title_full_unstemmed An investigation into the relationship between student identity and academic literacy at a private higher education institution
title_short An investigation into the relationship between student identity and academic literacy at a private higher education institution
title_sort investigation into the relationship between student identity and academic literacy at a private higher education institution
topic Education
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29697
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