Abstract

This paper addresses evidence that developing a sense of belonging for students from different ethnic groups impacts on their engagement. It notes previous findings that in universities habits of coexistence may present barriers to the development of relationships and the sense of student belonging. The paper proposes that cosmopolitan engagement offers a frame for considering the experience of cultural difference in the classroom. It stresses the importance of relationality and communication. The research, involving students undertaking business and science programmes in two culturally similar universities, has sought to develop a better understanding of how students in London engage with higher education, with their learning and with cultural others, and the impact on their learning of differing communication patterns. The study finds that students often feel distant from their tutors and afraid to ask for further explanation. Instead, they rely on a circle of friends to provide support and clarification. Students have identified the development of agency through engaging with others from different cultures. Engagement in practical collective tasks such as forensic lab work seems to have the potential to encourage communication across cultures, but observation have suggested that students tend to self-segregate. The article concludes that there cannot be a presumption of cosmopolitan engagement. Rather universities need to develop strategies for improving communication between students and staff and between students of different cultural backgrounds.

Highlights

  • Student belonging has become a defining term in higher education (Tinto, 1975, Pokorny et al, 2016) that is nuanced by the differing cultural backgrounds of students and the importance of relationships

  • This paper explores the context of the relational experience and the potential for the development of belonging for communities of culturally diverse commuter students in urban universities

  • Nixon refers to higher education playing an important role in securing the future of cosmopolitanism but the evidence from the data from this study demonstrated that there cannot be a presumption of cosmopolitan engagement

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Summary

Introduction

Student belonging has become a defining term in higher education (Tinto, 1975, Pokorny et al, 2016) that is nuanced by the differing cultural backgrounds of students and the importance of relationships. This paper explores the context of the relational experience and the potential for the development of belonging for communities of culturally diverse commuter students in urban universities.. The concern around the diversity of the student body in urban classrooms and the potential differential outcomes in the performance of ethnic minority groups is not new. The work of Mountford-Zimdars et al (2015) identifies that developing a sense of belonging for students from different ethnic groups impacts on performance. The literature suggests that there are habits of coexistence in evidence in the higher education classroom, which present barriers to the development of relationships and the sense of student belonging (Pokorny et al, 2016). This research allowed for an exploration of the parameters encountered by individual students in higher education that

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