What does ‘local’ mean when it describes a student or an institution of higher education? Holly Henderson explores this question by telling the story of students studying undergraduate degrees outside of the university, at colleges that offer degree courses but do not have university status. Because the students live at home while studying, and because the institutions themselves are seen to cater for a local rather than global student population, these are local students, studying local higher education. Importantly, the students are also studying in localities without a history of higher education provision, where the possibility of living in this place and studying for a degree is relatively new.The book takes an in-depth approach to exploring how relationships to these places affect educational experience, how decisions are made about whether to leave or to stay for degree study, and what it means to be an undergraduate student who does not attend a university. As well as working against the easy assumptions to be made about the lives and characteristics of a surprisingly diverse and complex group of students, the book offers insights into the ways that place and space are crucial and often overlooked factors for anyone thinking about systemic and structural inequality in higher education.
Holly Henderson is Assistant Professor in Education at the University of Nottingham, UK. Her research focuses on sociological issues of inequality in education, in particular access to and experiences of post-compulsory and higher education.
Introduction: Local Students at the Local College1. Understanding the Local Student: Concerns of Place, Mobilities and Space 2. Placed Possible Selves: Theorising Spatial and Temporal Educational Subjectivities3. What does ‘Local’ Mean? Non-University HE Provision as ‘Local’ Higher Education4. Being Local: Place, ‘Local’ Higher Education and Educational Subjectivities5. Staying Local: The Multiple Mobilities of the ‘Local’ Educational Subject6. Living Local: The Part and Whole of ‘Local’ Higher Education Spaces7. Placed Possible Selves: Spatial Stories of Im/PossibilityConclusionBibliography Index
That Non-University Higher Education crosses several boundaries — theoretical, sectoral, and disciplinary — means that contributions can be discerned in each of them. Its greatest value is perhaps in what its conceptual framework achieves, simultaneously connecting national setting, locality, and personal identity.