Research article

Becoming what you want to be

Author
  • Denise Batchelor

Abstract

Challenges to become what you want to be permeate higher education recruitment literature, inviting students to realize their dreams. Students do not interpret this invitation only in vocational terms. Other aspects of meaning for being and becoming are important for them: self-realization, and becoming who as well as what they want to be. A student voice for being and becoming is less valued and validated in contemporary higher education, and more vulnerable, than voices for knowing and doing. Yet if voices for being and becoming are unsupported, voices for knowing and doing also become vulnerable. Integrity of voice is undermined.

How to Cite:

Batchelor, D., (2006) “Becoming what you want to be”, London Review of Education 4(3), 225–238. doi: https://doi.org/10.1080/14748460601043841

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Published on
01 Nov 2006
Peer Reviewed
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