A new Policy Note published by the Higher Education Policy
Institute, Student belonging and the wider
context (Policy Note 39, attached) by Dr
Richard Vytniorgu, uses structured interviews with students to
explore the sense of belonging among students.
The Policy Note shows students’ sense of belonging in their
higher education institution is best situated in the context of
students’ sense of belonging in the wider world. Too often,
student belonging in higher education is evaluated as an isolated
phenomenon, specific to being a student. But students’ attitudes
to belonging at university or college correlate with their
attitudes to belonging more generally.
This correlation is borne out in two notable areas:
- While students welcome diversity of
staff and students, they caution more generally against excessive
emphasis on identity differences among people at the expense of
finding common ground that can bring people with different
backgrounds together.
- Residential students can often be
frustrated at the lack of opportunity to connect with local
communities beyond their institution or campus. They recognise
that the experience of home can be found anywhere, but that it
can be important to form a robust social life that might extend
beyond institutional affiliation, extending into the wider
community.
Dr Vytniorgu, the author of the paper,
said:
‘While student belonging is increasingly prominent in policy, too
often it is considered as an isolated phenomenon without any
reference to students’ broader ideas about what it means to
belong in the wider world. This report suggests some ways in
which belonging in higher education might be viewed in relation
to belonging more generally.
‘I hope it will encourage higher education policymakers to
consider how pro-belonging policies can impact and promote
students’ sense of belonging in the wider world.’
, Director of HEPI,
said:
‘There are few things in life as important for personal wellbeing
as feeling like you belong. This is already much more widely
recognised than it used to be, but we still need to do more work
to understand how to inculcate a sense of belonging, including
among students.
‘At the moment, young people in particular often feel squeezed
out by society, which tends to look and feel like it is often
more interested in the needs of older people than those on the
cusp of independent adulthood.
‘This is not an easy thing for educational institutions to
tackle, given constrained resources and the welcome increase in
diversity among the student body, yet the payoffs in terms of
student satisfaction, lower drop-out rates and improved learning
could be enormous.’
Mary Curnock Cook CBE, Chair of the UPP Foundation
Student Futures Commission and a HEPI Trustee, said:
“The UPP Foundation Student Futures Commission’s work laid bare
the unseen ravages of the pandemic which diminished students’
confidence in their academic studies and their personal and
professional relationships.
‘The powerful benefits experienced by students working closely
with university leaders during COVID led to our central
recommendation of a Student Futures Manifesto, co-created and
co-produced by students and staff.
‘Students told us that a more affiliative, networked and social
approach to relationships between staff and students was key to
feeling they were valued which in turn enhanced their feelings of
belonging.’
The report, which is partly a response to recent events where
student mental health and wellbeing do not seem to have had the
priority they deserve, includes five policy recommendations.
These are aimed at helping higher education professionals
consider how to foster a deeper sense of belonging among their
students:
-
Avoid reducing student belonging to a quirk of
individual students and recognise instead that
students emphasise the social, cultural, and environmental
dimensions of belonging.
-
Work with students and staff to identify areas of
common ground –Equality, Diversity, and Inclusion
policies should be wary of highlighting divisions among
students at the expense of student cohesion in academic and
co-curricular activities.
-
Facilitate deeper connections between students and
local communities to help students feel more ‘at home’
where they live and to encourage them to contribute to a larger
community beyond their institution.
-
Identify the cultural messages of the physical
environment because students know that physical
surroundings communicate ideas about who spaces are for and how
much institutions value different people.
-
Co-create pro-belonging policies at a local rather than
centralised level – for example, within departments
or, if working with university-wide services (such as student
mental health and wellbeing), in tandem with a departmental
lead for student experience.
This research was funded by a Wellcome Trust Institutional
Strategic Support Fund Award and carried out at the Wellcome
Centre for Cultures and Environments of Health, University of
Exeter.