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Students’ perceptions of value and motivations for studying an undergraduate degree in the humanities

Students’ perceptions of value and motivations for studying an undergraduate degree in the humanities
Students’ perceptions of value and motivations for studying an undergraduate degree in the humanities
This research examines how humanities students understand the purpose of going to university and the value of their degree in an increasingly market-driven higher education policy context. Utilising a sequential (follow-up) explanatory mixed methods approach, the research focuses on one particular institutional context to allow for an in-depth investigation. Data was collected from students studying for an undergraduate degree in the humanities at a UK research-intensive university, who commenced their studies between 2012-13 and 2015-16, and from graduates who commenced their studies prior to 2012.
The main findings suggest that there is a complex web of extrinsic and intrinsic motivations for studying an undergraduate degree in the humanities, strongly shaped by three core influencing contexts (societal, familial, educational). Strong media and political discourse on the financial investment and return of an undergraduate degree make humanities students feel that it is not enough to quantify the value of their degree in terms of its intrinsic value (i.e. their love of the subject area), thereby creating an inner conflict as they feel pressured to attribute a value to their degree based on their future employment outcomes. As such, perceptions of value are enacted in the policy context of marketisation and the impact of oversupply and competition. Graduates who studied under a lower or no tuition fee regime were less likely than contemporary counterparts to have instrumental motivations, however nonetheless reflect on the value of their degree in the context of their success in negotiating the graduate labour market. Humanities students under a higher university tuition fee regime are more likely to have consumerist attitudes compared with those who studied under a lower or no tuition fee regime.
With the voice of humanities students noticeably missing from existing literature, this research seeks to fill this gap by offering a deeper and more nuanced understanding as to how the marketisation of higher education has influenced students’ motivations and choice relating to university and shaped notions of the value of a degree.
University of Southampton
Stecker-Doxat, Nicola
3af5e46e-8605-4914-adb2-3939aeb84f5b
Stecker-Doxat, Nicola
3af5e46e-8605-4914-adb2-3939aeb84f5b
Tomlinson, Michael
9dd1cbf0-d3b0-421e-8ded-b3949ebcee18

Stecker-Doxat, Nicola (2021) Students’ perceptions of value and motivations for studying an undergraduate degree in the humanities. University of Southampton, Doctoral Thesis, 205pp.

Record type: Thesis (Doctoral)

Abstract

This research examines how humanities students understand the purpose of going to university and the value of their degree in an increasingly market-driven higher education policy context. Utilising a sequential (follow-up) explanatory mixed methods approach, the research focuses on one particular institutional context to allow for an in-depth investigation. Data was collected from students studying for an undergraduate degree in the humanities at a UK research-intensive university, who commenced their studies between 2012-13 and 2015-16, and from graduates who commenced their studies prior to 2012.
The main findings suggest that there is a complex web of extrinsic and intrinsic motivations for studying an undergraduate degree in the humanities, strongly shaped by three core influencing contexts (societal, familial, educational). Strong media and political discourse on the financial investment and return of an undergraduate degree make humanities students feel that it is not enough to quantify the value of their degree in terms of its intrinsic value (i.e. their love of the subject area), thereby creating an inner conflict as they feel pressured to attribute a value to their degree based on their future employment outcomes. As such, perceptions of value are enacted in the policy context of marketisation and the impact of oversupply and competition. Graduates who studied under a lower or no tuition fee regime were less likely than contemporary counterparts to have instrumental motivations, however nonetheless reflect on the value of their degree in the context of their success in negotiating the graduate labour market. Humanities students under a higher university tuition fee regime are more likely to have consumerist attitudes compared with those who studied under a lower or no tuition fee regime.
With the voice of humanities students noticeably missing from existing literature, this research seeks to fill this gap by offering a deeper and more nuanced understanding as to how the marketisation of higher education has influenced students’ motivations and choice relating to university and shaped notions of the value of a degree.

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Published date: January 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 457023
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/457023
PURE UUID: ce518aca-4053-4882-9bb9-17591d959d90
ORCID for Michael Tomlinson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1057-5188

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Date deposited: 19 May 2022 16:49
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:26

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Contributors

Author: Nicola Stecker-Doxat
Thesis advisor: Michael Tomlinson ORCID iD

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