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Walker, Melanie – Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education, 2022
South Africa still faces inequalities with regard to access to higher education opportunities. Foregrounding student voices at one university, the paper compares how students from diverse socio-economic backgrounds make decisions about going to university. The focus is on those who have succeeded, but ideas can be extrapolated regarding those who…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Access to Education, Foreign Countries, College Bound Students
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Walker, Melanie – Cambridge Journal of Education, 2018
This paper considers ways to theorise aspirations in terms of capabilities and agency to function as human beings, as well as our resources to act and participate in this world using a South African case of women students' aspirations. In this analysis higher education should foster women's freedom as critical agents to make genuine choices about…
Descriptors: Gender Differences, Womens Education, Academic Persistence, Decision Making
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Martinez-Vargas, Carmen; Walker, Melanie; Mkwananzi, Faith – Educational Action Research, 2020
There is a gap in research on access to universities in South Africa. The research that exists focuses on quantitative methodologies, although some qualitative studies are now emerging. These research methodologies, although necessary and substantial for the development of equity measures and policies, might be less successful in their impact on…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Access to Education, Higher Education, Student Empowerment
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Walker, Melanie – Gender and Education, 1997
Explores experiences of six women on two senior academic committees at a South African university to understand how practices in such committees contribute to the marginalization and exclusion of women and to constructions of subjectivity. Discusses how the presence of women on such committees challenges the consciousness of all members. (SLD)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Empowerment, Females, Foreign Countries