"Opening Higher Education:" Discursive transformations of distance and higher education government
"Öppna högskolan:" Diskursiva transformationer i styrningen av distansutbildning och högre utbildning
Abstract
This thesis takes as its starting point the 1990s and early 2000s political arguments for a more
open and flexible Swedish higher education system. At this time, the issues of accessibility and
participation were also brought into the debate by revitalized ideals of distance education. In
this study, the aim has been to denaturalize and render discursive shifts visible by examining
the assumptions and reasonings of “opening higher education.” The empirical material is
Swedish distance and higher education policies; Government bills, Government official
reports, and replies from universities and university colleges, from 1992 to 2005. The thesis
draws on a Foucauldian, post-structural understanding and approach of governmentality,
focusing on how discourses take part in a governing that constitutes certain problems,
solutions, and rationalities, made visible in policy. The overall purpose has been to analyze
how discourses suggesting widened, flexible, and democratic participation involve regulations
and orderings of students, institutions, and higher education systems.
The thesis includes four studies that demonstrate how discourses of openness become
parts of governing distance and higher education; how rationalities of expansion and flexibility
are aligned to securing higher education systems and populations, and how institutions and
individuals should adjust to flexible and personalized higher education. The first study
examines how a post-war, nation-based higher education expansion is re-configured in scale,
into regional, IT-based, European and global spatialities. The second study examines flexible
distance education in terms of gendered spatial orderings, problematically intended for female
populations. The third study explores how a certain ideal subjectivity and self-technology of
personalization is embedded in the notions of IT-based Learning management systems. The
last study examines the discursive shift from distance education to flexible learning and how a
spatial politics and polarizations of study modes (distance/flexible), university localizations
(distance/campus), and ideals of distance education (distance/closeness) are produced. The analyses reveal how liberal rationalities and self-organization of individuals,
populations and spatialities take part of the governing and how orderings; differentiation of
systems and exclusion of populations through spatial affiliation, gender, distance and IT study
modes, market and performance logics, are produced.
Parts of work
Securing higher education expansion: “Non-places,” “Markets” and “Transits” as a contemporary spatial politics (submitted) Gendered distance education spaces: ”Keeping women in place”? In S. Booth, S. Goodman, & G. Kirkup (Eds.). Gender issues in learning and working with information technology: Social constructs and cultural contexts. Hershey, New York: IGI Global, 2010. (Information) technologies of the self: Personalization as a mode of subjectivation and knowledge production (submitted) Flexibel utbildning – ”något annat och mera”? Rumspolitiken i skiftet från distansutbildning till flexibelt lärande [Flexible education – ”something else and different”? The shift from distance education to flexible learning as spatial politics]. In T. Karlsohn (Ed.). Samhälle, teknik och lärande. Stockholm: Carlsson, 2009.
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Utbildningsvetenskapliga fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Education
Institution
Department of Education, Communication and Learning ; Institutionen för pedagogik, kommunikation och lärande
Disputation
Fredagen den 12 november 2010, kl. 14.00, Margaretha Huitfeldts auditorium, Pedagogen, Läroverksgatan 5
Date of defence
2010-11-12
annika.bergviken-rensfeldt@gu.se
Date
2010-10-25Author
Bergviken Rensfeldt, Annika
Keywords
distance and IT-based education
higher education
policy analysis
governmentality
discourse
bio-politics
space
self-technology
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-7346-693-6
ISSN
0436-1121
Series/Report no.
Acta Universitatis Gothoburgensis
Gothenburg Studies in Educational sciences
300
Language
eng