‘A real rollercoaster of confidence and emotions': learning to be a university student
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Date
2007Author
Christie, Hazel
Tett, Lyn
Cree, Vivienne E
Hounsell, Jenny
McCune, Velda
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Abstract
Accounts of emotion and affect have recently gained popularity in studies of learning.
This paper draws on qualitative research with a group of non-traditional students
entering an elite university in the UK to illustrate how being and becoming a
university student is an intrinsically emotional process. It argues that feelings of loss
and dis-location are inherent to the students' experiences of entering university, and
that 'coming to know' a new community of practice is an emotional process that can
incorporate feelings of alienation and exclusion, as well as of excitement and
exhilaration. A broader understanding of how students learn then depends not just
upon the individual's emotional commitment to developing a new learning identity but
on the emotional interaction between the student and the learning environment of the
university.