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Featured researches published by Jo Watson.


British Journal of Sociology of Education | 2009

Strange new world: applying a Bourdieuian lens to understanding early student experiences in higher education

Jo Watson; Melanie Nind; Debra Humphris; Alan Borthwick

Occupational therapy pre‐registration education stands at the intersection of the fields of health and social care and higher education. UK Government agendas in both fields have seen an increase in the number of students entering with non‐traditional academic backgrounds, a group noted to experience particular challenges in negotiating the transition to, and persisting and succeeding within, higher education. Drawing on data from an ongoing longitudinal case study, a Bourdieuian lens is applied to exploring the early educational experiences of a group of these students during their first year of study and highlights a number of key issues, including the high‐value status of linguistic capital and its relationship to understanding the rules governing practices within the learning environment, the processes via which students manage to adapt to or interestingly, to resist, the dominant culture of the field, and some of the barriers to finding a foothold and legitimate position within the new field.


British Journal of Sociology of Education | 2013

Profitable portfolios: capital that counts in higher education

Jo Watson

Under-representation in UK higher education of students from less privileged social backgrounds is an enduring problem. While there are examples of productive participation, the pattern of collective trajectories of this group differs sharply from that of traditional entrants. The onus falls largely on students to adapt to established practices that remain strongly oriented towards traditional white middle-class populations. Bourdieus theory of practice informed the analysis of data emerging from a longitudinal case study, and empirical insights are offered into how students with non-traditional academic backgrounds experienced and negotiated the demands of studying in one of the UKs research-intensive universities. A new conceptual framework identifies academic, linguistic, social and professionally-oriented capital as underpinning the logic of practice of this sub-field of higher education, and their influence on the positional tendencies and trajectories of the students operating within it are highlighted.


British Journal of Occupational Therapy | 2006

Occupational Therapy Students' Approaches to Learning: Considering the Impact of Culture

Jo Watson; Judith Chapman; Jo Adams; Ummey Hamida Nila

Learning approaches describe the way that individuals approach tasks or learning situations and are influenced by individual characteristics and specific learning contexts. Cultural factors are likely to have an impact on various aspects of learning, yet the literature disagrees over the extent to which culture influences approaches to learning. With increasing cultural diversity in student cohorts and the contributions of culturally Western therapists to occupational therapy programmes in developing nations, this issue is worthy of exploration within the context of pre-registration education. The Approaches to Study Inventory was used to explore differences in the approaches to learning of United Kingdom and Bangladeshi occupational therapy students studying in their home countries. Significant differences between the groups revealed that the Bangladeshi students displayed both stronger tendencies for deep approaches to learning (p<0.05) and for less integrated superficial approaches to learning (p< 0.05). This apparent contradiction required careful consideration. There is no single correct way to learn. This studys results reinforce the need for cultural sensitivity in not only clinical but also educational contexts. The cultural biases underpinning the constructs of deep and superficial learning approaches are explored. Educators are encouraged to recognise the potential for culture to influence how students engage within the learning environment and how they themselves construct learning opportunities.


Higher Education Research & Development | 2015

Maintaining the status quo: symbolic violence in higher education

Jo Watson; Jacqueline Widin

Government policies and financial imperatives have fostered growing heterogeneity in student bodies in UK and Australian higher education (HE), but the underpinning logic of practice in these long-established social fields is far slower to change. Drawing on empirical evidence from case studies in each nation, this paper examines the tensions between the espoused and enacted values of the academy in relation to the widening participation and internationalisation agendas. We describe the research sites, their relationships with their respective fields of power and the experiences of participants as inhabitants of these HE fields. We highlight the struggles to secure relevant capital, acts of symbolic violence occurring at both institutional and programme levels and the resultant impact on individual positions and trajectories within the fields. Finally, we consider the extent to which the established practices in HE, which naturally preserve the dominance of the dominating factions, are likely to shift to enable it to genuinely enact the social conscience it espouses.


British Journal of Occupational Therapy | 2005

Supporting success in diverse student populations

Jo Watson

Government agendas seek to widen participation in university education. Reforms of the National Health Service incorporate a commitment to increase the number of occupational therapists being educated. As a result, the nature of recruitment is changing, with an increasing number of students commencing occupational therapy pre-registration programmes with non-traditional entry qualifications. In response to the apparent difficulty with meeting academic requirements experienced by some of these students, the School of Health Professions and Rehabilitation Sciences at the University of Southampton developed an innovative short course known as ‘Summer School’, aimed at easing the transition into higher education. The evaluation of participant feedback gathered through questionnaires at two points during their first year indicates the potential of the course for preparing students with non-traditional entry qualifications for study at undergraduate level.


International Journal of Research & Method in Education | 2016

Working in the Methodological "Outfield": The Case of Bourdieu and Occupational Therapy.

Jo Watson; Michael Grenfell

The article reports on a study of methodological innovation involving occupational therapy (OT) students in higher education (HE). It is based on an original project which examined the experiences and outcomes of non-traditional entrants to pre-registration OT education. A feature of the original project was the application of the epistemological and methodological approach of the French social theorist Pierre Bourdieu, most noticeably in exploring the way that social back ground (habitus) interacted with the educational (field) context in terms of experience and educational outcome. Bourdieu used a ranged of techniques – both qualitative and quantitative – in collecting and analysing data. In particular, he used multiple correspondence analysis (MCA), a type of geometric data analysis recognized as a powerful tool enabling the representation of social space and the situating of individuals within it with respect to a number of variables. The article considers methodological principles in comparing ethnographic, traditional statistics and MCA. We show how the original data were reanalysed according to MCA. The article compares the original analyses and findings with those based on MCA in order to explore its strength over the previous approach and the potential it has to cast light on various issues in HE.


International journal of therapy and rehabilitation | 2005

Enhancing student support to facilitate workforce development

Jo Watson

Reforms of the NHS incorporate an ambition to expand the occupational therapy (OT) workforce by increasing the number of funded student places by 40% by 2004 (College of Occupational Therapists (COT), 2003). The aim is not only to increase numbers, but to develop a recruitment base that more closely reflects the cultural diversity of both society and NHS service users (Department of Health (DoH), 2000).


British Journal of Occupational Therapy | 2006

Exploring Changes in Occupational Therapy Students' Approaches to Learning during Pre-Registration Education

Judith Chapman; Jo Watson; Jo Adams


Archive | 2011

Widening participation in higher education: capital that counts

Jo Watson


Archive | 2011

Occupational therapy education: An appalling paradox?

Jo Watson

Collaboration


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Alan Borthwick

University of Southampton

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Debra Humphris

University of Southampton

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Jo Adams

University of Southampton

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Judith Chapman

University of Southampton

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Melanie Nind

University of Southampton

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Michael Curtin

Charles Sturt University

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