“Shining a Light” on Mature-Aged Students In, and From, Regional and Remote Australia

This article shines a light on a little-known cohort of higher education participants, mature-aged students in, and from, regional and remote Australia – the focus of a National Centre for Student Equity in Higher Education mixed-methods study. Notable patterns were found in the quantitative data; f...

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Main Authors: Nicole Crawford, Sherridan Emery
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Queensland University of Technology 2021-08-01
Series:Student Success
Subjects:
Online Access:https://studentsuccessjournal.org/article/view/1919
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spelling doaj-8cb60e812f72417eadaf52154c71fc132021-08-05T22:53:06ZengQueensland University of TechnologyStudent Success2205-07952021-08-01122182710.5204/ssj.19192212“Shining a Light” on Mature-Aged Students In, and From, Regional and Remote AustraliaNicole Crawford0https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4031-3709Sherridan Emery1https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2949-2793Curtin UniversityUniversity of Tasmania This article shines a light on a little-known cohort of higher education participants, mature-aged students in, and from, regional and remote Australia – the focus of a National Centre for Student Equity in Higher Education mixed-methods study. Notable patterns were found in the quantitative data; for instance, compared to their metropolitan counterparts, higher proportions of regional and remote students were older, female, from low socio-economic status areas, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander, and studied online and/or part-time. The presentation of four vignettes from the interviews uncovers the stories behind the numbers, revealing students’ diverse and complex circumstances; two of the students shared experiences of facing systemic obstacles, while the other two described receiving invaluable institutional support. The obstacles can be attributed to systems designed for “ideal”, “implied” and “traditional” students, and entrenched attitudes that privilege some “types” of students over others and limit the aim of full participation for all students.https://studentsuccessjournal.org/article/view/1919mature-aged studentsregional and remoteequity in higher education
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nicole Crawford
Sherridan Emery
spellingShingle Nicole Crawford
Sherridan Emery
“Shining a Light” on Mature-Aged Students In, and From, Regional and Remote Australia
Student Success
mature-aged students
regional and remote
equity in higher education
author_facet Nicole Crawford
Sherridan Emery
author_sort Nicole Crawford
title “Shining a Light” on Mature-Aged Students In, and From, Regional and Remote Australia
title_short “Shining a Light” on Mature-Aged Students In, and From, Regional and Remote Australia
title_full “Shining a Light” on Mature-Aged Students In, and From, Regional and Remote Australia
title_fullStr “Shining a Light” on Mature-Aged Students In, and From, Regional and Remote Australia
title_full_unstemmed “Shining a Light” on Mature-Aged Students In, and From, Regional and Remote Australia
title_sort “shining a light” on mature-aged students in, and from, regional and remote australia
publisher Queensland University of Technology
series Student Success
issn 2205-0795
publishDate 2021-08-01
description This article shines a light on a little-known cohort of higher education participants, mature-aged students in, and from, regional and remote Australia – the focus of a National Centre for Student Equity in Higher Education mixed-methods study. Notable patterns were found in the quantitative data; for instance, compared to their metropolitan counterparts, higher proportions of regional and remote students were older, female, from low socio-economic status areas, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander, and studied online and/or part-time. The presentation of four vignettes from the interviews uncovers the stories behind the numbers, revealing students’ diverse and complex circumstances; two of the students shared experiences of facing systemic obstacles, while the other two described receiving invaluable institutional support. The obstacles can be attributed to systems designed for “ideal”, “implied” and “traditional” students, and entrenched attitudes that privilege some “types” of students over others and limit the aim of full participation for all students.
topic mature-aged students
regional and remote
equity in higher education
url https://studentsuccessjournal.org/article/view/1919
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