Activists within the academy: the role of prior experience in adult learners' acquisition of postgraduate literacies in a postapartheid South African university
Author(s)
Cooper, LindaKeywords
widening accessacademic literacy practices
adult learners in higher education
social movements
recognition of prior learning
Bourdieu
transformation
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http://hdl.handle.net/11427/8894Abstract
This is a post-print of the published version of a SAGE Journal article available on: http://aeq.sagepub.com/content/early/2010/08/27/0741713610380441.full.pdf.The article takes as a case study a group of disability rights activists who were given access to a master's program via Recognition of Prior Learning. The question explored is "Can adult learners' prior experiential knowledge act as a resource for the successful acquisition of postgraduate academic literacy practices?" The analysis is framed theoretically by Bourdieu's notions of habitus, capital, and field. It is argued that adult learners' acquisition of postgraduate literacies is an outcome of the interplay between three factors: (a) student habitus and dispositions, (b) pedagogic agency, and (c) the nature of the disciplinary field. Although the program under investigation made complex demands on students, lecturers' understanding of student habitus enabled students' prior experiential knowledge to be tapped as a resource. However, students also exercised agency in negotiating the forms of academic habitus acquired, and the trajectory of their agency involved a mix of accommodation, resistance, and challenge.
Date
2014-10-28Type
textIdentifier
oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/88941552-3047
http://hdl.handle.net/11427/8894