Graduate Students’ Perceptions of Instructor Power in the U.S. Higher Education Classroom

IF 0.8 Q3 INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS & LABOR New Horizons in Adult Education and Human Resource Development Pub Date : 2023-07-29 DOI:10.1177/19394225231189937
Antonio Delgado, Craig M. McGill
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Abstract

Higher education is a distribution center of knowledge and economic, social, and cultural power. The instructor’s power is usually unquestioned, particularly by students who must comply with instructors who are the gatekeepers to resources they need. Understanding alienation in higher education classrooms illuminate how power influences educational transactions and the interests of both students and instructors. Literature on student alienation in higher education has primarily focused on depersonalized discourses or persistence/retention, which avoids the central and most basic unit of the system: the instructor-student relationship. This study explored graduate students’ understandings of their experiences involving the power of their instructors in the higher education classroom. The findings of this study revealed that students understood their experiences involving instructor power in connection to the instructor-student relationship, and they responded to power and alienation through strategies for self-preservation. To understand how instructor power shapes students’ higher education experience and the methods by which this power takes shape, instructors must enable students to recognize, discuss, and challenge that power.
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美国高等教育课堂中研究生对教师权力的感知
高等教育是知识和经济、社会、文化力量的集散地。教师的权力通常是毋庸置疑的,特别是对于那些必须服从教师的学生来说,教师是他们所需资源的看门人。对高等教育课堂异化的理解,揭示了权力如何影响教育交易以及学生和教师的利益。关于高等教育中学生异化的文献主要集中在去个性化的话语或坚持/保留上,而回避了系统的中心和最基本的单位:师生关系。本研究旨在探讨研究生对高等教育课堂中导师权力的理解。本研究发现,学生在师生关系中理解了涉及教师权力的体验,并通过自我保护策略来应对权力和异化。为了理解教师权力如何影响学生的高等教育经历,以及这种权力形成的方法,教师必须让学生认识到、讨论和挑战这种权力。
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