Traditionally, the most socially and academically selective UK universities expected students to move from the family home to the institution during term time. More recently, there has been a growing trend for students to live at home and commute to university, with the proportion commuting driven in part by the COVID-19 pandemic and the cost-of-living crisis.
Examining commuting through a social justice lens rather than focusing solely on the way in which commuters navigate home and university identities, Living and Studying at Home: Degrees of Inequality explores the social characteristics, experiences, and outcomes of commuting students in an old Scottish university, highlighting the social class dimension of commuting. To redress the social inequalities identified, the authors consider what universities can do to meet the needs of commuter students who are currently highly marginalised.
Drawing on findings of recent research undertaken by the authors, chapters discuss why commuting is socially structured by a range of factors including social deprivation, caring responsibilities, ethnicity, disability, and being a mature student, and suggest future policy, cultural and pedagogical changes which challenge the systemic inequalities experienced by living at home students.
Living and Studying at Home: Degrees of Inequality explores the social characteristics, experiences, and outcomes of commuting students in an old Scottish university, highlighting the social class dimension of commuting.
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. Literature Review and Methodology
Chapter 3. The Social Characteristics of Commuter Students: Survey Findings
Chapter 4. Socio-economic Status and Students’ Daily Lives
Chapter 5. The Experiences of Mature Students
Chapter 6. The Experiences of Black and Minority Ethnic Students
Chapter 7. The Experiences of Commuter Students who are Disabled
Chapter 8. Degrees of Inequality
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Biographical note
Sheila Riddell was the founding Director of the Strathclyde Centre for Disability Research at the University of Glasgow, UK, and the Centre for Research in Education, Inclusion and Diversity at the University of Edinburgh, UK.
Lyn Tett is Professor Emerita at the University of Edinburgh, UK, conducting research into community education and lifelong learning.
Hazel Christie is Programme Director for the Postgraduate Certificate in Academic Practice at the University of Edinburgh, UK.
Rachael King is Programme Director of the University of Edinburgh's Access Programme, providing adult learners with a route to undergraduate study.
Sofia Shan is an Institutional Researcher in the Department of Learning and Teaching Enhancement at Edinburgh Napier University, UK.