Striving Toward Social Justice: Promoting Equity and Inclusion in Higher Education Through Pedagogical Partnership

A special issue of Social Sciences (ISSN 2076-0760). This special issue belongs to the section "Social Stratification and Inequality".

Deadline for manuscript submissions: 15 December 2024 | Viewed by 1383

Special Issue Editor


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Guest Editor
Education Department, Bryn Mawr College, Bryn Mawr, PA 19010, USA
Interests: student-faculty pedagogical partnership; student voice; equity and justice in higher education

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

You are invited to submit an Abstract for consideration for inclusion in “Striving toward Social Justice: Promoting Equity and Inclusion in Higher Education through Pedagogical Partnership”, a Special Issue of Social Sciences. I have detailed guidelines for submission below.

Most efforts to promote equity and inclusion in higher education are guided by shared underlying premises, such as conceptualizing differences as resources, considering the particular strengths and needs students bring, and designing learning environments and approaches that support all students so that they can succeed and thrive. They are also necessarily shaped by context-specific challenges and possibilities, including cultural norms, political agendas, institutional values, and individual commitments. Pedagogical partnership, co-creation, and students-as-partners work—similar but not synonymous terms—hold promise, but not necessarily a guarantee, of promoting equity and inclusion in higher education (Cook-Sather, 2020; de Bie et al., 2021).

For this Special Issue, I am calling for articles and reviews focused on pedagogical partnership understood as “a collaborative, reciprocal process through which all participants have the opportunity to contribute equally, although not necessarily in the same ways, to curricular or pedagogical conceptualization, decision making, implementation, investigation, or analysis” (Cook-Sather, Bovill, & Felten, 2014, pp. 6–7). Such partnership, as Gravett et al. (2019) note, is an ethos: “a dialogic and values-based approach to learning and teaching that has the potential to be transformative, developmental and fun” (p. 2586). Co-creation, as such work is also sometimes called, involves “shared decision-making, shared responsibility and negotiation of learning and teaching” (Bovill, 2020, p. 2), and it “disrupts the reductive teacher-student power hierarchy by granting agency and power to both sides to shape the classroom experience while also being cognisant of the different functional roles that each person inhabits” (student partner Jiayi Loh in Cook-Sather & Loh, 2023).

Abstracts should make clear and explicit how the full article or review will address the question of how pedagogical partnership can promote equity and inclusion in higher education, thereby striving toward social justice.

References

  • Bovill, C. (2020). Co-creation in learning and teaching: The case for a whole-class approach in higher education. Higher Education, 79, 1023-1037. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10734-019-00453-w.
  • Cook-Sather, A., Bovill, C., & Felten, P. (2014). Engaging Students as Partners in Learning & Teaching: A Guide for Faculty. Jossey-Bass.
  • Cook-Sather, A., & Loh, J. (2023). Embracing student agentic engagement and enacting equity in higher education through co-creating learning and teaching. In T. Lowe (Ed). Advancing Student Engagement in Higher Education: Reflection, Critique and Challenge.
  • de Bie, A., Marquis, E., Cook-Sather, A., & Luqueño, L. P. (2021). Promoting Equity and Justice through Pedagogical Partnership. Stylus Publishers. https://www.centerforengagedlearning.org/books/promoting-equity-and-justice-through-pedagogical-partnership.
  • Gravett, K., Kinchin, I. M., & Winstone, N. E. (2019). ‘More than customers’: Conceptions of students as partners held by students, staff, and institutional leaders. Studies in Higher Education, 45(12), 2,574-2,587. https://doi.org/10.1080/03075079.2019.1623769

Dr. Alison Cook-Sather
Guest Editor

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Keywords

  • student voice
  • equity and justice in higher education
  • social inclusion
  • student–faculty pedagogical partnership

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Published Papers (1 paper)

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Review

42 pages, 397 KiB  
Review
Bringing a Social Justice Lens to Matthews’ Five Propositions for Genuine Students-as-Partners Practice: A Narrative Review
by Ruth L. Healey
Soc. Sci. 2024, 13(11), 577; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13110577 - 25 Oct 2024
Viewed by 681
Abstract
In 2017, in the second issue of the International Journal for Students as Partners (IJSaP), Matthews presented five propositions for genuine students-as-partners practice. Whilst these propositions did not focus directly on social justice, a social justice ethos (seeking to achieve parity [...] Read more.
In 2017, in the second issue of the International Journal for Students as Partners (IJSaP), Matthews presented five propositions for genuine students-as-partners practice. Whilst these propositions did not focus directly on social justice, a social justice ethos (seeking to achieve parity of participation for all in higher education) was implicit within the discussion. Working with students as partners (SaP) can contribute to social justice, and a social justice perspective can contribute to the practice and conceptualization of students-as-partners work. From this perspective, I present a narrative literature review that brings a social justice lens to Matthews’ five propositions by examining 26 publications (research articles, case studies, reflective essays, and opinion pieces) in IJSaP concerning students-as-partners work. These are identified using the search terms “justice”, “equity”, “inclusion”, and “ethical”. The review provides clear examples of how the practice of working with students as partners can promote equity and inclusion in higher education, thereby striving toward social justice. Full article
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