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Conceptualising and Building Trust to Enhance the Engagement and Achievement of Under-Served Students

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posted on 2025-05-11, 20:16 authored by Ameena L. Payne, Catherine StoneCatherine Stone, Rebecca Bennett
This conceptual article asserts the importance of building and sustaining trust between higher education students and practitioners within the online environment. Instilling trust can construct sustainable learning environments that are abundant with collaborative inquiry and dialogue. In this article, we highlight and investigate the conceptual construct of trust and its antecedents. Considering the nature and purpose of interpersonal trust in student-instructor relationships within online higher education institutions, we explore several factors (in particular, performativity, casualisation of teaching staff, neoliberalism, non-traditional student identities, and the digital divide) which influence the development of trust. We also investigate the role of trust in influencing student engagement and achievement, in terms of attainment of academic goals. Notably, we highlight the importance of further inquiry into methods of rapport-building in higher education. Theoretical foundations have been drawn from Indigenous scholarship as well as organisational and socio-psychological literature. We close by welcoming further discussion and reflection on institutional practices and performance measures in the digital environment, particularly in terms of whether they allow instructors to embed relational aspects and elicit cognitive and affective trust from their students.

History

Journal title

Journal of Continuing Higher Education

Volume

71

Issue

2

Pagination

134-151

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

College of Human and Social Futures

School

School of Humanities, Creative Industries and Social Sciences

Rights statement

This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor &Francis in the Journal of Continuing Higher Education on 24 January 2022, available at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07377363.2021.2005759.

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