Abstract

The study reports on research carried out at the five major technical higher institutions in Romania. It views the human values students bring with them to the educational setting as rhizomatic lines, in the Deleuzian sense, and aims at identifying the intensity of each value, respectively, at grasping the correlations between the students’ values and their projection concerning postgraduation life, including nomadic (i.e., migration) intentions. Such an approach is novel in educational research. The 1782 valid responses collected after applying an online questionnaire were subjected to multivariate statistical analyses. The results unfold the research stages, from intensity-identification concerning the 18 values included in the questionnaire to the factor extraction and correlation findings that highlight strata beneath the upper layer of responses. The values boil down to three nodes of the rhizome, anchoring the Romanian engineers-to-be in the present setting and allowing them to grow in a sustainable manner, i.e., to become professionals, socially accepted, and belonging to a group. The findings are useful to professors, who need to constantly check their assumptions about the profile of the young generation, to better ground their partnership relation with students in moral realities that are relevant and help learners face disruption, crisis, incertitude.

Highlights

  • The scientific literature, popular press, and polity reports on higher education vocally and energetically warn that the millennium-old university structure needs profound and radical rethinking

  • The combination of methods brings forward numerous aspects that can prove useful in the quest for grasping the correlations and mutual interconnectedness of the values shared by the young generation

  • The investigation of the human values shared by the engineers-to-be, schooled in Romanian technical universities, viewed through rhizomatic lenses showed that all 18 values are important to the respondents, but with various intensities

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Summary

Introduction

The scientific literature, popular press, and polity reports on higher education vocally and energetically warn that the millennium-old university structure needs profound and radical rethinking. Since in the early 1970s, harsh voices called for “deschooling society” [1], due to the fact that the democratization of the educational system led to an industrial mode of mass production of skilled, but uniformized labor force. “Hey, teachers, leave the kids alone”—sang Pink Floyd, a rock band popular at the time, blaming the levelling effect of the education that transforms each and every human being into “another brick in the Wall” (1979). Higher levels of schooling are required to ensure access to the labor market. Employability, the level of financial security, and self-realization directly depend on education, evidence being produced that “higher education pays, both financially and socially, for the individual as well as society” [4]

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