Conditions enabling or constraining the exercise of agency among new academics in higher education, conducive to the social inclusion of students

dc.contributor.advisorBoughey, Chrissie
dc.contributor.advisorJacobs, C
dc.contributor.authorBehari-Leak, Kasturi
dc.date.accessioned2026-02-09T16:16:55Z
dc.date.issued2015
dc.description.abstractThis study, which is part of a National Research Foundation project on Social Inclusion in Higher Education (HE), focuses on the exercise of agency among new academics, conducive to the social inclusion of students. Transitioning from varied entry points into higher education, new academics face numerous challenges as they embed themselves in disciplinary and institutional contexts. Given the complexity and contested nature of the current higher education landscape, new academics are especially vulnerable. Using Roy Bhaskar's critical realism as meta-theoretical framing and Margaret Archer's social realist theory, with its methodological focus on analytical dualism and morphogenesis, this study offers a social realist account of how new academics engage with enabling and constraining conditions at institutional, faculty, departmental and classroom levels. Through an analysis of six individual narratives of mediation, this study explicates and exemplifies the range of agential choices exercised by new academics to mediate their contested spaces. A nuanced social and critical account of the material, ideational and agential conditions in HE shows that the courses of action taken by these new academics are driven through their concerns, commitments and projects in higher education. Yet, despite the university's espousal of embracing change, the current induction and transition of new academics is inadequate to the task of transformation in higher education. Systemic conditions in HE, conducive to critical agency and social justice, are not enabling. Bhaskar's Seven Scalar Being, used as an analytical frame and heuristic, guides the cross-case analysis of the six narratives across seven levels of ontology. The findings highlight that, despite difficult contextual influences, the positive exercise of agency is a marked feature of new participants in HE in this study. This has immediate implications for ways in which professional and academic development, and disciplinary and departmental programmes, could create and sustain conducive conditions for the professionalisation of new academics through more sensitised practices. Using alternative research methods such as photovoice to generate its data, this doctoral study proposes that new research methodologies, located in the third space, are needed now more than ever in HE sociological research, to recognise the researcher and the research participants as independent, autonomous and causally efficacious beings. To this end, this study includes a Chapter Zero, which captures the narrative of the doctoral scholar as researcher, who, shaped and influenced by established doctoral practices and traditions in the field, exercises her own doctoral agency in particular ways.
dc.description.degreeDoctoral thesis
dc.description.degreePhD
dc.format.extent483 pages
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdf
dc.identifier.otherhttp://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1020295
dc.identifier.urihttps://researchrepository.ru.ac.za/handle/123456789/1455
dc.languageEnglish
dc.publisherRhodes University, Faculty of Education, Centre for Higher Education Research, Teaching and Learning
dc.rightsBehari-Leak, Kasturi
dc.subjectSocial integration -- South Africa
dc.subjectStudents -- South Africa -- Social conditions
dc.subjectEducational change -- South Africa
dc.subjectCollege teachers -- South Africa
dc.subjectEducation, Higher -- South Africa
dc.subjectCritical realism
dc.subjectSocial realism
dc.subjectAgent (Philosophy)
dc.titleConditions enabling or constraining the exercise of agency among new academics in higher education, conducive to the social inclusion of students
dc.typeAcademic thesis

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