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Student performativity in higher education: converting learning as a private space into a public performance

Student performativity in higher education: converting learning as a private space into a public performance
Student performativity in higher education: converting learning as a private space into a public performance
The paper sets out a conceptual analysis of student performativity in higher education as a mirror image of teacher performativity. The latter is well known and refers to targets, evaluations and performance indicators connected with the measurement of the teaching and research quality of university academics. The former is defined as the way that students are evaluated on the basis of how they perform at university in bodily, dispositional and emotional terms. Specifically, this includes rules on class attendance and assessment (‘presenteeism’), an increasing emphasis on participation in class and in groups as part of learning and assessment regimes (‘learnerism’) and the surveillance of students’ emotional development and values (‘soulcraft’). Student performativity is symbolic of the ‘performing self’ in wider society and is transforming learning at university from a private space into a public performance. This negatively impacts student rights to be free to learn as autonomous adults.
performativity, student engagement, student learning, student rights
0729-4360
1-13
Macfarlane, Bruce
3e2b9eb0-1772-4642-bb51-ab49cc5b748c
Macfarlane, Bruce
3e2b9eb0-1772-4642-bb51-ab49cc5b748c

Macfarlane, Bruce (2014) Student performativity in higher education: converting learning as a private space into a public performance. Higher Education Research & Development, 1-13. (doi:10.1080/07294360.2014.956697).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The paper sets out a conceptual analysis of student performativity in higher education as a mirror image of teacher performativity. The latter is well known and refers to targets, evaluations and performance indicators connected with the measurement of the teaching and research quality of university academics. The former is defined as the way that students are evaluated on the basis of how they perform at university in bodily, dispositional and emotional terms. Specifically, this includes rules on class attendance and assessment (‘presenteeism’), an increasing emphasis on participation in class and in groups as part of learning and assessment regimes (‘learnerism’) and the surveillance of students’ emotional development and values (‘soulcraft’). Student performativity is symbolic of the ‘performing self’ in wider society and is transforming learning at university from a private space into a public performance. This negatively impacts student rights to be free to learn as autonomous adults.

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e-pub ahead of print date: October 2014
Keywords: performativity, student engagement, student learning, student rights
Organisations: Southampton Education School

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Local EPrints ID: 373065
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/373065
ISSN: 0729-4360
PURE UUID: b622e84a-fc11-4beb-8987-e6718e16e7a1

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Date deposited: 06 Jan 2015 14:46
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 18:47

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Author: Bruce Macfarlane

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