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Stevenson, Jacqueline; Clegg, Sue – Gender and Education, 2012
Despite the assertion that higher education is becoming increasingly "feminised" and that male students are the relative losers, gendered meanings continue to permeate higher education in ways that mean that the recognition of women's experiences are frequently marginalised. Our paper reports on research designed to explore student participation…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Extracurricular Activities, Females, Student Participation
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Stevenson, Jacqueline; Clegg, Sue – British Educational Research Journal, 2011
This paper explores the under-researched area of extracurricular activity undertaken by students through the lens of the possible selves literature, which has largely been developed in the North American context. In the UK the employability agenda assumes an orientation towards the future and employers are increasingly expecting students to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Extracurricular Activities, Individual Development, Employment Potential
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Clegg, Sue; Stevenson, Jacqueline; Willott, John – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education and Educational Planning, 2010
This paper explores conceptions of curricular and extracurricular in UK higher education. Reporting on a case study of staff understandings of the extracurricular we argue that our data highlight the lack of debate about curricular matters. We found that there was considerable blurring of boundaries in conceptions of the curricular and…
Descriptors: Caring, Higher Education, Extracurricular Activities, Foreign Countries
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Flint, Abbi; Clegg, Sue; Macdonald, Ranald – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2006
This paper presents analysis of qualitative data from a research project looking at staff perceptions of plagiarism at a post-1992 university. Twenty-six members of staff from departments and academic schools from across the university took part in open and semi-structured interviews. Analysis shows that variable definitions of plagiarism exist;…
Descriptors: Plagiarism, College Faculty, Teacher Attitudes, Interviews