Neoliberalism, massification and teaching transformative politics and international relations
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Halvorson, Dan
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Abstract
‘Massification’ describes the significant increase in the proportion of the global population seeking tertiary qualifications. It is a defining feature of the global international education sphere and is often seen as linked to negative outcomes such as declining academic standards and increasing managerialism in universities. Massification, however, is not wholly or even mostly a negative for the generations of new students who now have access to tertiary education. Education can still be a transformative experience for students exposed to a rich learning environment. The question this symposium raises is how the disciplines of politics and international relations can ensure they maintain quality teaching and learning for students from subject design to program design. The collection aims to initiate a disciplinary debate in Australia, which has hitherto been missing.
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Australian Journal of Political Science
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51
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3
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© 2016 Taylor & Francis (Routledge). This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education on 15 Jul 2016, available online: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/10361146.2016.1200706
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Policy and administration
Political science
Political science not elsewhere classified