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Research Article

The effects of student-consumerism on discipline specific teaching practices: a comparison of education and law

Pages 417-432 | Received 17 Jun 2019, Accepted 20 May 2020, Published online: 09 Jun 2020
 

ABSTRACT

Student consumerism in the Higher Education (HE) sector continues to stimulate critical academic commentary about the consequences of marketisation. Although much of the debate focuses on the effects that consumerism has on student achievement, little empirical research has analysed the effect that consumerism has on teaching and associated practices from an academic standpoint. Moreover, the disparities between how differing disciplines perceive student consumerism, and the varying effects that this has depending on the academic discipline, remain under-researched. This paper examines findings from eight in-depth interviews that sought to investigate the effects of student-consumerism on the teaching practices of academics from the departments of education and law, in one post-1992 university in England. It finds that perceptions of student-consumerism differ between the disciplines of education and law. One of the key arguments for this finding is that academics in the field of education are accustomed to a regulatory environment, whereas law academics are acclimatised to greater levels of autonomy. A further argument put forward by this paper is that the stark contrast in graduate salary expectations between education and law, may also impact upon student consumerism.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Tawney Bennett

Tawney Bennett is a Lecturer in Law at the University of Salford and teaches in the fields of Criminal Law and Criminal Justice. Her research in higher education is focused on student consumerism, legal education and technology enhanced learning.

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