ABSTRACT
Academic culture is a distinct and unique field, and perhaps may best be conceptualised as a space. Although access to university has traditionally been restricted, recent efforts on a number of fronts have attempted to ‘open’ the space of the academy. In particular, enabling programmes such as Preparatory Programs and Foundation Courses aim to provide both access and enabling experiences to students who have found the doors of the university closed to them. The research reported here combined a Bourdieuian framework with a phenomenological methodology to explore the lived experience of students who were most of the way through such a programme at a Go8 Australian university. Thirteen students were interviewed and the data were analysed for experiences of enculturation and positive transformation, as well as alienation and negative transformation. The results showed that while in general the students are able to adopt the habitus of academic culture this was a painful and difficult process, and not entirely successful in all cases. This, combined with the inherent limitations of much research of this kind, gives us reason to pause in the overarching story of social mobility that usually surrounds these types of programmes.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
Notes
1. There is a highly fluid situation in Australia at the moment, since in an environment of sharp funding cuts and a (heavily opposed and so far unsuccessful) deregulation reform agenda, equity has largely been removed from public discourse (Dawkins, Citation2015).