Investigating the experiences of foundation degree students progressing to an honours degree: an integrated approach
Investigating the experiences of foundation degree students progressing to an honours degree: an integrated approach
Progression from a foundation degree to an honours degree has become an increasingly popular pathway through higher education. The route creates dual institution scenarios in which students can progress from a further education institution to a higher education institution. This paper reports on research into the academic and social integration of progression students into a higher education institution to complete their honours degree. It highlights the ways in which progression students face many first year issues whilst completing the final stage of their higher education studies and possible ways of addressing these issues. The evidence presented here suggests an explicit need to recognise not only the academic and social issues of progression, but also how these relate to the wider physical and cultural changes experienced. It also suggests that these issues are often overlooked by research which focuses almost exclusively on variables affecting the retention and attrition of traditional first year students
253-270
Winter, Jennie
00c35569-3f09-4b3a-bf44-43679ec7270f
Dismore, Harriet
9981d51e-d034-4da1-8f07-289095572001
13 May 2010
Winter, Jennie
00c35569-3f09-4b3a-bf44-43679ec7270f
Dismore, Harriet
9981d51e-d034-4da1-8f07-289095572001
Winter, Jennie and Dismore, Harriet
(2010)
Investigating the experiences of foundation degree students progressing to an honours degree: an integrated approach.
Journal of Further and Higher Education, 34 (2), .
(doi:10.1080/03098771003695502).
Abstract
Progression from a foundation degree to an honours degree has become an increasingly popular pathway through higher education. The route creates dual institution scenarios in which students can progress from a further education institution to a higher education institution. This paper reports on research into the academic and social integration of progression students into a higher education institution to complete their honours degree. It highlights the ways in which progression students face many first year issues whilst completing the final stage of their higher education studies and possible ways of addressing these issues. The evidence presented here suggests an explicit need to recognise not only the academic and social issues of progression, but also how these relate to the wider physical and cultural changes experienced. It also suggests that these issues are often overlooked by research which focuses almost exclusively on variables affecting the retention and attrition of traditional first year students
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Published date: 13 May 2010
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Local EPrints ID: 344548
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/344548
ISSN: 0309-877X
PURE UUID: 3b79ad96-c421-45ea-b85d-8f1e96c21d08
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Date deposited: 25 Oct 2012 08:34
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 12:14
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Author:
Jennie Winter
Author:
Harriet Dismore
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