Bilateral (Hong Kong): Joint initiatives between UK and Hong Kong higher education institutions - an examination of student and employer perspectives
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Liverpool
Department Name: Geography
Abstract
Abstracts are not currently available in GtR for all funded research. This is normally because the abstract was not required at the time of proposal submission, but may be because it included sensitive information such as personal details.
Organisations
People |
ORCID iD |
Johanna Waters (Principal Investigator) |
Publications
Leung M
(2013)
British degrees made in Hong Kong: an enquiry into the role of space and place in transnational education
in Asia Pacific Education Review
Waters J
(2013)
'These are not the best students': continuing education, transnationalisation and Hong Kong's young adult 'educational non-elite'
in Children's Geographies
Leung M
(2013)
Transnational higher education for capacity development? An analysis of British degree programmes in Hong Kong
in Globalisation, Societies and Education
Waters J
(2012)
A Colourful University Life? Transnational Higher Education and the Spatial Dimensions of Institutional Social Capital in Hong Kong
in Population, Space and Place
Johanna Waters (Author)
(2013)
'To have a degree is to be normal' : young people and transnational higher education in Hong Kong
in Sociological research online
Waters J
(2016)
Domesticating transnational education: discourses of social value, self-worth and the institutionalisation of failure in 'meritocratic' Hong Kong
in Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers
Waters J
(2013)
Immobile Transnationalisms? Young People and Their in situ Experiences of 'International' Education in Hong Kong
in Urban Studies
Description | Students taught on transnational higher education (TNE) programmes in Hong Kong do not receive the same 'benefits' as students studying for the equivalent degree in the UK. TNE students are disadvantaged in various ways: sub-standard teaching; non-recognition of their degrees in the local labour market; a lack of campus experiences associated with university; fewer privileges compared with local university students. |
Exploitation Route | The findings would be useful for researchers working on TNE in other contexts (outside of Hong Kong). |
Sectors | Education |