Research Database

Equalizing and Widening Access to Higher Education During a Pandemic: Lessons Learned from a Multi-University Perspective

Type of Publication: Journal article

Lead Organisation: Macquarie University

Year Published: 2021

Lead Researcher: Emlyn Dodd

Emlyn Dodd1, Sonal Singh2, Jim Micsko3, Kylie Austin4, Carolina Morison5 and Stuart Upton5

Originally published in Student Success
17 September 2021

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic caused a rapid and unprecedented shift of widening participation and outreach activities to online and remote delivery. The impact of this went beyond practitioners and the university sector; positive and negative implications are felt by stakeholders and the broader community. This shift online is discussed through the lens of a multi-university perspective, using four case studies from university outreach programs in one Australian state. The article provides a holistic view of the lessons learned and discoveries made, informing future program design and delivery. These programs include primary and secondary students, teachers, parents, guardians and carers, and work within a range of low socioeconomic and regional, rural and remote contexts. We argue that the fundamentally necessary shift online created a profound legacy and bears potential to increase accessibility (via diversity and scale), but, simultaneously, that care must be applied if substituting face-to-face engagement with that online. While this article primarily focuses on issues of value to practitioners, it also discusses important implications for academics, support staff, and university executive regarding the access and participation of underrepresented cohorts during times of mass change.

View the full article in Student Success.


1University of Technology Sydney
2UTS
3Western Sydney University
4University of Wollongong
5Macquarie University

Content reproduced under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence.

Posted 22 September 2021