Abstract

At higher education institutions (HEI), which for centuries served only to educate the elite, the composition of the student body is increasingly changing towards greater social and cultural diversity. Students’ differences are also the focus of this article, but not with a specific emphasis on preselected categories. Instead, the article asks how students in teaching in higher education (HE) are represented in the print media and professional discourse in Germany, i.e., which categories of difference are constructed as relevant in HE teaching contexts, which are normalized and (de)legitimized, and what is expected of HEI concerning these differences. Second, to what extent does this change over time, particularly concerning the new circumstances of Corona‐based digital teaching in 2020? The contribution is based on a combination of discourse theory and neo‐institutional organizational sociology. Discourses are a place where social expectations towards organizations are negotiated and constructed. Simultaneously, the discourses construct a specific understanding of HE, making visible openings and closures concerning different groups of students. Which students are constructed as legitimate, desirable, at risk of dropping out, or a risk for HE quality? Based on qualitative content analysis, the article shows that it is less the traditional socio‐structural categories such as gender, social or ethnic origin, or impairments, that are discussed to be relevant in HE teaching contexts. The reproduction of inequality and the associated discrimination is hardly discussed. The focus is instead on the students’ differences concerning individualizable characteristics, competencies, or study practices. Even though many of these individualized differences are conveyed via socio‐structural categories, this connection is often not considered in the discourses.

Highlights

  • Various developments have led to an increasing diversification of the student body in many countries: The transformation process towards a knowl‐ edge society was accompanied by educational expansion and the so‐called massification of universities (Altbach et al, 2017)

  • By analyzing print media and the professional discourses, this article looks at how students in higher education (HE) teaching have been represented in Germany in recent years and what is expected of Higher education institutions (HEI) concerning these differences

  • Discourses can serve as a mirror of societal environmental expec‐ tations towards HEI and, at the same time, as a place where social reality is constructed through discursive practices and normalizations,legitimations, inclusion, and exclusion are produced

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Summary

Introduction

Various developments have led to an increasing diversification of the student body in many countries: The transformation process towards a knowl‐ edge society was accompanied by educational expansion and the so‐called massification of universities (Altbach et al, 2017). Besides opportu‐ nities to reach the Abitur in evening classes or other forms of adult education, recent regulative changes allow vocationally qualified students to enter HEI (Bernhard, 2017) Due to these developments and those mentioned above (e.g., internationalization), the diver‐ sification of the student body can be witnessed in the German HE system. Germany rep‐ resents an exciting case where increasing diversification meets a traditionally highly segregated system in which university teaching and its professionalization still play a rather subordinate role Against this background, by analyzing print media and the professional discourses, this article looks at how students in HE teaching have been represented in Germany in recent years and what is expected of HEI concerning these differences. The reported and required prac‐ tices in dealing with students and the environmen‐ tal expectations at universities are presented

State of Research and Theoretical Conceptualization
State of Research
Research Design
Expectations Towards Higher Education Institutions
Findings
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