2018
DOI: 10.18546/lre.16.2.03
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Developing relationality and student belonging: The need for building cosmopolitan engagement in undergraduate communities

Abstract: This paper addresses evidence that developing a sense of belonging for students from different ethnic groups impacts on their engagement. It notes previous findings that in universities habits of coexistence may present barriers to the development of relationships and the sense of student belonging. The paper proposes that cosmopolitan engagement offers a frame for considering the experience of cultural difference in the classroom. It stresses the importance of relationality and communication. The research, i… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(3 citation statements)
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References 30 publications
(18 reference statements)
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“…Relationality requires trust and is reflected in Indigenous ways of being and knowing (Nutton et al, 2020). There is a parallel between relationality and the culturally safe classroom that encourages both faculty and student to reach to each other in socially just and equitable ways; this in turn contributes to a sense of belonging (Bamford and Pollard, 2018). When belonging occurs in this way, becoming and transforming are achieved.…”
Section: Relationalitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Relationality requires trust and is reflected in Indigenous ways of being and knowing (Nutton et al, 2020). There is a parallel between relationality and the culturally safe classroom that encourages both faculty and student to reach to each other in socially just and equitable ways; this in turn contributes to a sense of belonging (Bamford and Pollard, 2018). When belonging occurs in this way, becoming and transforming are achieved.…”
Section: Relationalitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We have seen through past research (Bamford and Pollard, 2018;Pollard and Bamford, 2021) that students from under-represented groups can struggle to make the social transition to university, with busy lives and local community links outside of university. The extracurricular intervention described in this article was designed by staff and students in a London institution to create an inclusive digital experience that provides opportunities for the recognition of students' development outside the formal curricular boundaries.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This overarching context is additional to the more traditional discourse around transition, which is steeped in the development of subject based cognitive growth. In the contemporary urban HE classroom, students not only bring with them a multitude of cultural dimensions (Bamford & Pollard, 2018) but also work and family commitments that they need to juggle within this transition, as highlighted by Thomas (2019). The multi‐dimensional, multi‐level transitions that students from differing cultural backgrounds undergo have been extensively acknowledged in the work of those such as Jindal‐Snape and Reinties (2016).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%