Working‐class women on an Access course: risk, opportunity and (re)constructing identities
- 1 March 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Gender and Education
- Vol. 16 (1) , 97-113
- https://doi.org/10.1080/0954025032000170363
Abstract
Framed by discourses of lifelong learning and widening participation, further education Access to University courses attract mature students from a range of social backgrounds. This paper focuses on eight women students who, to varying degrees, share educational and occupational histories and aspirations. We explore their experiences of the Access programme by referring to developing learner and class identities and related femininities. This transitional phase is not a straightforward one of simply shedding old identities and donning unproblematic new ones, but is instead a period of reflexivity and risk, confusion and contradiction. Based on interviews held on termly basis throughout the one‐year course, we draw on an analysis of risk to examine the gendered complexities of transitional class and learner identities and developing educational histories. In so doing, we challenge the assumption that a changing learner identity necessitates a corresponding shifting class identity.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Finding or losing yourself?: working-class relationships to educationJournal of Education Policy, 2001
- For Me or Not for Me? Fragility and Risk in Mature Students' Decision‐MakingHigher Education Quarterly, 2001
- Risk, identity and change: Becoming a mature studentInternational Studies in Sociology of Education, 2001
- Engaging with commonality and difference: Theoretical tensions in the analysis of working-class women's educational discoursesInternational Studies in Sociology of Education, 2001
- Lifelong Debt: Rates of Return to Mature StudyHigher Education Quarterly, 2001
- 'Bettering Yourself'? Discourses of risk, cost and benefit in ethnically diverse, young working-class non-participants' constructions of higher educationBritish Journal of Sociology of Education, 2000
- ‘Getting Out and Getting Away’: Women's Narratives of Class MobilityFeminist Review, 1999
- Rethinking Social Class: Qualitative Perspectives on Class and GenderSociology, 1998
- Women and Class Analysis: A Reply to John GoldthorpeSociology, 1984
- Women and Class Analysis: In Defence of the Conventional ViewSociology, 1983