An Emotive Operation of Neoliberalism in Higher Education: Seeking a Second Chance in Hong Kong

被引:5
作者
Wong, Yi-Lee [1 ]
机构
[1] Chinese Univ Hong Kong, Shatin, Ho Tim Bldg, Hong Kong, Peoples R China
关键词
emotions; Hong Kong; neoliberalism; second chance; transfer; COMMUNITY-COLLEGE STUDENTS; WORKING-CLASS STUDENTS; ETHNICALLY DIVERSE; SOCIAL-CLASS; UNIVERSITY; ILLUSTRATION; HABITUS;
D O I
10.1177/0091552120964878
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
Objective:Educational expansion as a policy is believed to address the issue of the youth's blocked social mobility. But, the argument that the transition to university is emotionally straining in a deindustrialized neoliberal context suggests an emotive aspect of neoliberalism in higher education. This article seeks to offer an illustration of such an emotive operation of neoliberalism through examining the emotional struggles of community-college students in Hong Kong.Method:This study draws on two qualitative analyses based on data collected from 83 community-college students in Hong Kong pursuing a bachelor's degree through a newly available transfer function of an associate degree.Results:Given an emphasis of neoliberalism on individualism and competition, the respondents showed the following negative emotions: perverse feelings of inferiority about the new option, stress about the competitiveness of this pursuit and strategic/calculating in organizing their learning and dealing with their classmates, and anxiety of being seen as inadequate despite their successful transferals.Contributions:The emotional struggles of the respondents suggest that in view of a lack of well-paid prestigious professional or managerial jobs in a deindustrialized capitalist context, educational expansion as a policy-expanding the sector of community college in particular-wrapped up in a neoliberal discourse is not merely giving the youth a false hope but inflicting on them unnecessarily strained emotions. This suggestion urges policy makers to rethink the effectiveness of adopting an educational policy with a neoliberal approach to address an economic issue.
引用
收藏
页码:76 / 95
页数:20
相关论文
共 75 条
[41]  
Lawler S, 1999, FEMINIST REV, P3
[42]   It's a struggle': the construction of the 'new student' in higher education [J].
Leathwood, C ;
O'Connell, P .
JOURNAL OF EDUCATION POLICY, 2003, 18 (06) :597-615
[43]   Out with the Old, In with the New? Habitus and Social Mobility at Selective Colleges [J].
Lee, Elizabeth M. ;
Kramer, Rory .
SOCIOLOGY OF EDUCATION, 2013, 86 (01) :18-35
[44]   Working-class participation, middle-class aspiration? Value, upward mobility and symbolic indebtedness in higher education [J].
Loveday, Vik .
SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW, 2015, 63 (03) :570-588
[45]   Neo-liberalism and Marketisation: the implications for higher education [J].
Lynch, Kathleen .
EUROPEAN EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH JOURNAL, 2006, 5 (01) :1-17
[46]   'Uni has a different language ... to the real world': demystifying academic culture and discourse for students from low socioeconomic backgrounds [J].
McKay, Jade ;
Devlin, Marcia .
HIGHER EDUCATION RESEARCH & DEVELOPMENT, 2014, 33 (05) :949-961
[47]   Educating the national citizen in neoliberal times: from the multicultural self to the strategic cosmopolitan [J].
Mitchell, K .
TRANSACTIONS OF THE INSTITUTE OF BRITISH GEOGRAPHERS, 2003, 28 (04) :387-403
[48]  
MOK KH, 2012, SOCIAL POLICY REV, V3, P131, DOI DOI 10.1080/03050060500036956
[49]  
Ng P., 2015, Public Administration and Policy, V18, P27
[50]  
Raby RL, 2009, COMMUNITY COLLEGE MODELS: GLOBALIZATION AND HIGHER EDUCATION REFORM, P1, DOI 10.1007/978-1-4020-9477-4