Higher Education and Hope: Institutional, Pedagogical and Personal Possibilities

Springer Verlag (2019)
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Abstract

Around the world, the landscape of Higher Education is increasingly shaped by discourses of employability, rankings, and student satisfaction. Under these conditions, the role of universities in preparing students for all facets of life, and to contribute to the public good, is reshaped in significant ways: ways which are often negative and pessimistic. This book raises important and pressing questions about the nature and role of universities as formative educational institutions, drawing together contributors from both Western and non-Western perspectives. While the editors and contributors critique the current situation, the chapters evince a more humane and compassionate framing of the work of and in universities, based on positive and valued relationships and notions of the good. Drawing together a wide range of theoretical and conceptual frameworks to illuminate the issues discussed, this volume changes the debate to one of hopefulness and inspiration about the role of higher education for the public good: ultimately looking towards a potentially exciting and rewarding future through which humanity and the planet can flourish.

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Chapters

Working in the Neoliberal University: Other-Regarding Virtues and Hope

This chapter begins by identifying certain core conditions of the neoliberal university. Drawing on recent scholarship in the field which have viewed the neoliberal university as ‘toxic’ and as operating a regime of ‘terror’ it is argued that the manifestation of neoliberalism within universities se... see more

Centering Humanism Within the Milieu of Sustained Student Protest for Social Justice in Higher Education Within South Africa

Student protest actions across South Africa’s twenty six universities has somewhat become a predictable event due to its sustained occurrence over the last decade, engendering a stereotypical attitude to protesting students and university education. Coupled with massification, the South African high... see more

Is Higher Education Inherently Good, Educative Practices Intrinsically Good and Universities Instrumentally Good? What Should We Hope For?

Although there has been considerable debate in contemporary literature on the erosion of public good in higher education, most of it has concentrated on the word ‘public’ in the phrase rather than on the notion of ‘good’. A focus on the ‘good’ is attempted here, and the distinctions between inherent... see more

A Hope to Believe in: A Transition Programme to Support Mature Students’ access to Higher Education

This chapter discusses a case-study from a Higher Education institution in Surrey, where a project of pedagogical innovation, the ‘Transition Programme’, successfully solved the paradoxical status of selective procedures that are caught between the principle of inclusiveness within the widening part... see more

Cultivating Confucius’ Ren in Hong Kong Higher Education

A considerable number of universities in the West focus on the acquisition of the values of benevolence and compassion as an essential skill or enlightening aide for educators, healthcare professionals, social workers and even public service employees. Rather than viewing these values as skills that... see more

The Enchantment of Social Theory: Engaging Equity Imaginaries in the Neoliberal Academy

Much has been written about the inscription of neoliberalism into higher education. Replying to how neoliberalism is constructed within the academy, this chapter explores emancipatory imaginaries that provide metaphorical space and time for scholars to experience fun, creativity, the beauty of natur... see more

Folds, Fractals and Bricolages for Hope: Some Conceptual and Pedagogical Tactics for a Creative Higher Education

One of the main tasks confronting contemporary educators, is to maintain optimism and hope and be pro-actively creative amidst the bureaucracy and perfunctory processes of the university. Despite expectations to conform to institutional prescriptions, pedagogical tactics can be invoked, which can op... see more

The Pursuit of Compassionate Hope: Repurposing the University Through the Sustainable Development Goals Agenda

Warwick, Morgan and Miller offer an important exploration of higher education for hope within the civic context of global social justice and environmental points of crisis. Focusing on the UN Sustainable Development Goals as a framework for societal change they look at ways that education can incuba... see more

Is Caring Pedagogy Really So Progressive? Exploring the Conceptual and Practical Impediments to Operationalizing Care in Higher Education

Caring is a complex and fundamental human relational assumption around which all institutional and personal educational interactions are planned. As an ethic, the basis of academic and personal bonds, and the mark of an authentic community, it stands behind what academics and teachers do as the core... see more

Hygge, Hope and Higher Education: A Case Study of Denmark

Higher education institutions have been profoundly reshaped by processes associated with neoliberalism. In this chapter, Larsen outlines the ways in which Denmark has ushered in market-driven reforms to the Danish higher education system to enhance their institutional competitiveness over the past 3... see more

A Public University’s Balancing Act: Institutional Possibilities, Pedagogical Advancement, Individual Benefit, and State Economic Development

As a land grant, flagship American public institution, the University of Wyoming’s transformation to connect the University’s values with Wyoming’s twentyfirst century needs while fostering a harmonious balance in the state takes place in a unique context. UW, the sole university serving the country... see more

Pedagogies of Hopefulness and Thoughtfulness: The Social-Political Role of Higher Education in Contemporary Societies

This chapter argues that there is a link between critical thought and the ability to remain hopeful even under highly problematic conditions like the neoliberal environment of contemporary higher education. It discusses Hannah Arendt’s and Richard Rorty’s reflections on thinking and hope and suggest... see more

Resources of Hope: Truth and Reason

What distinguishes those who hope from those who merely indulge in wishful thinking is their willingness to confront and challenge the apparent hopelessness of the situation in which they find themselves. Therein lies the paradox of hope. The situation in which we—located in the first quarter of the... see more

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