Acknowledgements --;Introduction --;Through the Looking Glass: or what Pierre Bourdieu and Kingsley Amis have in common --;The Heart of Darkness: Audit and Compliance --;The Language of Learning --;Gendered Spaces --;Iron Cages --;Survival Strategies --;Notes --;Index --;A --;B --;C --;D --;E --;F --;G --;H --;I --;J --;K --;L --;M --;N --;O --;P.
SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
The more it costs, the less it's worth." (Student slogan, London, 2003) "We are told that this world represents our best hope for intellectual vitality and creativity. We are also told that we should pay more to enter it and experience its rich resources. Yet those rich resources are increasingly marginalized by cultures of assessment and regulation, the heavy costs of which (both financial and intellectual) are to be carried by students. Increasingly students are being asked to pay for the costs of the regulation of higher education rather than education itself. Access to Higher Education.
TOPICAL NAME USED AS SUBJECT
Education -- Aims and objectives -- Great Britain.