Item – Theses Canada

OCLC number
1007011849
Link(s) to full text
LAC copy
LAC copy
Author
Given, Lisa M.(Lisa Mae),1970-
Title
The social construction of the mature student identity : effects and implications for academic information behaviours.
Degree
Ph. D. -- University of Western Ontario, 2000
Publisher
Ottawa : National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, [2001]
Description
4 microfiches
Notes
Includes bibliographical references.
Abstract
Advocates of 'lifelong learning' promise positive change for individuals and society, but the transition to 'student' life is difficult for mature university students. Those traits which define the 'student' identity on campus, in society, and in current research, conflict with many adults' experiences. The normalised 'traditional student' identity is marked by freedom from parental control and the social aspects of university life; this discourse marginalizes 'adult learners' who are stereotypically portrayed as middle-aged and concerned with parenting and employment issues. The social acceptance of these competing discourses, and their influence on academic policy, affects both the construction of a 'student' identity and individuals' information behaviours. Through a combined methodology, grounded in a postmodern framework of social constructionism, this study explores the 'student' identity, and the academic and informational experiences of mature students (over age twenty-one), returning to university studies after an absence of at least three years. The study's first phase involves the manipulation of Canadian Census data. Cross-tabulations and logistic regression analyses show the limitations of 'adult learner' stereotypes and the privileging of the 'traditional student' in the Census' design. For instance, 'school attendance' only refers to the September to April academic year, while many mature students take summer courses. Also, the Census currently does not track students' re-entry status. In the second phase of the study, in-depth qualitative interviews examine the lives of twenty-five mature, re-entry students at The University of Western Ontario. This shared institutional context provides insight into the 'student' discourses on campus, academic and informational support, and the effect of the environment on the construction of a 'student' identity. The interviews explore the integration of information behaviours into mature students' daily lives, and the impact of discursive constructions on these behaviours. The results detail the pursuit of academic success, and dispel stereotypical myths of the 'adult learner'. For instance, while children are typically viewed as barriers to academic success, the interviewees' children supported their parents by reading assignments or searching for information. The study's findings call for research and service practices based on mature students' individual academic and informational needs, rather than stereotypical discursive constructions.
ISBN
0612582116
9780612582118