‘I feel like I have a disadvantage’: how socio-economically disadvantaged students make the decision to study at a prestigious university"
published in Studies in Higher Education 19/4/18.
Abstract
This paper presents findings from an interpretative phenomenological analysis with 20 students from socio-economically disadvantaged backgrounds who were accepted onto a Foundation Year in Oxford University. It explores the factors that impacted on their decision to apply to a prestigious university and student’s views on their transition to the prestigious university. The analysis highlighted four key factors:
(1) The complex relationship students had with their schools and the wider education system;
(2) The strong sense of agency they showed in overcoming a range of systemic and structural barriers;
(3) Social relationships with family members, peers and the wider community; (4) The importance of the Foundation Year model in supporting transitions to the university.
The identified factors have two key implications:
(1) a need to engage in system-wide structural reform that empowers students to develop an agentic approach to HE choices and
(2) a need for prestigious institutions to ensure that schools and teachers are empowered with cultural capital and knowledge of the admissions processes to support students’ applications in an equitable way.