University of Wollongong
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‘Don’t let anyone bring me down again’: applying ‘possible selves’ to understanding persistence of mature-age first-in-family students

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posted on 2024-11-16, 02:23 authored by Janine Delahunty, Sarah O'SheaSarah O'Shea
This article applies the framework of possible selves to the motivation and persistence behaviours of one group of university students. We draw on possible selves to consider how particular goal-focused actions and life experiences may significantly shape movements towards imagined futures. Utilising a narrative approach from longitudinal data, this article considers the ways in which possible selves were articulated by five first-in-family students, all of whom were mature-aged women returning to formal learning. A series of vignettes enabled us to explore how students themselves conceived of this movement into university, and how hoped-for selves were considered and enacted (or not). The ways in which societal expectations and expected life trajectories impact (re)conceptualisation of ‘selves’ are discussed, particularly when individuals choose an unexpected or non-normative life course.

Funding

Rethinking higher education persistence

Australian Research Council

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History

Citation

Delahunty, J. & O'Shea, S. (2020). ‘Don’t let anyone bring me down again’: applying ‘possible selves’ to understanding persistence of mature-age first-in-family students. Higher Education Research and Development, Online First 1-15.

Journal title

Higher Education Research and Development

Volume

40

Issue

3

Pagination

461-475

Language

English

RIS ID

143356

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