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Access to higher education in South Africa: Expanding capabilities in and through an undergraduate Photovoice project

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Access to higher education in South Africa: Expanding capabilities in and through an undergraduate Photovoice project. / Vargas, Carmen Martinez; Walker, Melanie; Mkwananzi, Faith.
In: Educational Action Research, Vol. 27, No. 2, 31.05.2019, p. 427-442.

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Vargas CM, Walker M, Mkwananzi F. Access to higher education in South Africa: Expanding capabilities in and through an undergraduate Photovoice project. Educational Action Research. 2019 May 31;27(2):427-442. Epub 2019 May 7. doi: 10.1080/09650792.2019.1612767

Author

Vargas, Carmen Martinez ; Walker, Melanie ; Mkwananzi, Faith. / Access to higher education in South Africa : Expanding capabilities in and through an undergraduate Photovoice project. In: Educational Action Research. 2019 ; Vol. 27, No. 2. pp. 427-442.

Bibtex

@article{993e3792c5464e579d93ce94f5a653aa,
title = "Access to higher education in South Africa: Expanding capabilities in and through an undergraduate Photovoice project",
abstract = "There is a gap in research on access to universities in South Africa. The research that exists focuses on quantitative methodologies, although some qualitative studies are now emerging. These research methodologies, although necessary and substantial for the development of equity measures and policies, might be less successful in their impact on the local context, on research participants and in expanding what counts as knowledge in the university. In this paper, participatory research, which has not been used to research access, is explored. The paper seeks to go beyond the instrumentalization of research participants – especially those from low-income households – highlighting the potential of using multi-strategy research, in which participatory elements are included as a way to foster both participants{\textquoteright} human development and local impact. Drawing on a research project on access to higher education in South Africa, the paper demonstrates that by including participatory elements (in this case photovoice) has the potential to operationalize Appadurai{\textquoteright}s notion of the {\textquoteleft}right to research{\textquoteright} among undergraduates. Using data, including processes, observations, workshops, interviews, and visual narratives from a participatory photovoice project, the findings highlight how methodological plurality creates space for locally and relevant knowledge production, challenging epistemic barriers and fostering human development among the research participants.",
author = "Vargas, {Carmen Martinez} and Melanie Walker and Faith Mkwananzi",
year = "2019",
month = may,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1080/09650792.2019.1612767",
language = "English",
volume = "27",
pages = "427--442",
journal = "Educational Action Research",
issn = "0965-0792",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Access to higher education in South Africa

T2 - Expanding capabilities in and through an undergraduate Photovoice project

AU - Vargas, Carmen Martinez

AU - Walker, Melanie

AU - Mkwananzi, Faith

PY - 2019/5/31

Y1 - 2019/5/31

N2 - There is a gap in research on access to universities in South Africa. The research that exists focuses on quantitative methodologies, although some qualitative studies are now emerging. These research methodologies, although necessary and substantial for the development of equity measures and policies, might be less successful in their impact on the local context, on research participants and in expanding what counts as knowledge in the university. In this paper, participatory research, which has not been used to research access, is explored. The paper seeks to go beyond the instrumentalization of research participants – especially those from low-income households – highlighting the potential of using multi-strategy research, in which participatory elements are included as a way to foster both participants’ human development and local impact. Drawing on a research project on access to higher education in South Africa, the paper demonstrates that by including participatory elements (in this case photovoice) has the potential to operationalize Appadurai’s notion of the ‘right to research’ among undergraduates. Using data, including processes, observations, workshops, interviews, and visual narratives from a participatory photovoice project, the findings highlight how methodological plurality creates space for locally and relevant knowledge production, challenging epistemic barriers and fostering human development among the research participants.

AB - There is a gap in research on access to universities in South Africa. The research that exists focuses on quantitative methodologies, although some qualitative studies are now emerging. These research methodologies, although necessary and substantial for the development of equity measures and policies, might be less successful in their impact on the local context, on research participants and in expanding what counts as knowledge in the university. In this paper, participatory research, which has not been used to research access, is explored. The paper seeks to go beyond the instrumentalization of research participants – especially those from low-income households – highlighting the potential of using multi-strategy research, in which participatory elements are included as a way to foster both participants’ human development and local impact. Drawing on a research project on access to higher education in South Africa, the paper demonstrates that by including participatory elements (in this case photovoice) has the potential to operationalize Appadurai’s notion of the ‘right to research’ among undergraduates. Using data, including processes, observations, workshops, interviews, and visual narratives from a participatory photovoice project, the findings highlight how methodological plurality creates space for locally and relevant knowledge production, challenging epistemic barriers and fostering human development among the research participants.

U2 - 10.1080/09650792.2019.1612767

DO - 10.1080/09650792.2019.1612767

M3 - Journal article

VL - 27

SP - 427

EP - 442

JO - Educational Action Research

JF - Educational Action Research

SN - 0965-0792

IS - 2

ER -