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Massification and quality of higher education: transforming quality enhancement of teaching and learning

Stephanie Marshall

Chapter 18 in Research Handbook on the Transformation of Higher Education, 2023, pp 268-280 from Edward Elgar Publishing

Abstract: Since the 1970s, around the globe, governments recognised the economic and social benefits of expanding student participation in Higher Education (HE). A highly skilled workforce came to be identified as a key cornerstone of competitive advantage. And thus, the movement to expand higher education in first world countries began, moving from elite to mass systems typified by that of the US. The transformational journey, over a number of decades, as explored in this chapter, focuses on key actors in influencing and shaping government policy, with a particular focus on England. Additionally, four key pivot points are identified: firstly, the post-war expansion of higher education: massification. Secondly, the determination of how governments’ increased expenditure on higher education could be justified, i.e. the need for public accountability (which led to the development of quality assurance systems around the globe). Thirdly, the move from base-line approaches to quality to quality enhancement (i.e. added value). And, finally, from the early 2000s, governments placing a much greater spotlight on the purposes of higher education, leading to concerns for equality and equity issues. Meanwhile, technological advances, and the various reports they informed, led to broader access to trend analysis, and provided data highlighting diversity and inclusivity issues. The chapter concludes with reference to the Covid-19 pandemic, representing an insufficiently explored additional pivot point in this narrative of post-war massification and quality enhancement, with the early signs insufficiently yet explored and evidenced to continue the post-war transformation quality enhancement of teaching and learning narrative explored in this chapter.

Keywords: Business and Management; Education; Politics and Public Policy Sociology and Social Policy (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2023
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