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Practical and profound: multi-layered benefits of a university enabling program and implications for higher education

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posted on 2025-05-09, 17:58 authored by Nicole Crawford
This small-scale study focused on the University of Tasmania’s (UTAS) University Preparation Program (UPP) in Launceston, Tasmania. It set out to identify the benefits of UPP from the perspectives of former UPP students, once they were in a degree. The research approach is qualitative; former UPP students were interviewed one-on-one or in focus groups, and data were analysed thematically. The themes that arose were expected and practical, such as development of academic skills, confidence and connections, and understanding the expectations and demands of the university culture. In addition, some findings were unexpected and profound; former UPP students had taken on leadership roles in their first semester of undergraduate study, and had changed their long-standing attitudes towards, and understandings of, people from cultures different to their own. Enabling programs, such as UPP, have multi-layered benefits, influences and flow-on effects, which students carry into their degrees, benefiting other students and the university, as well as potentially influencing their families, friends, and communities. Such impacts prompt a reconsideration of the meaning of ‘success’ in higher education, and challenge the argument that widening participation risks decreasing course quality and lowering university standards. Furthermore, enabling programs are a transition strategy and social inclusion in practice.

History

Journal title

International Studies in Widening Participation

Volume

1

Issue

International Studies in Widening Participation , 2

Pagination

15-33

Publisher

University of Newcastle

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

College of Human and Social Futures

School

Centre of Excellence for Equity in Higher Education (CEEHE)

Rights statement

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0

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