Constructing failure: Students’ discursive practices, valorization and choice of behaviour in learning and examination situations
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Date
2018-12
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Ghana Social Science Journal
Abstract
This study about how students construct failure is motivated by the desire
to investigate what students mean by failure, that is, how students
constitute the object of failure and how they relate to the object so
constructed. Studies regarding what students think of failure, how they
define it, and what they do to prevent it or to manage it are rare. It is an
exploratory study that may contribute to the understanding of the logic of
students’ attitudes and behaviour when they are confronted by
examinations. It is an ethnographic study using mainly interviews and
observations. The information was analyzed within the framework of
students’ experiencing, attitudinizing and acting. The analysis shows that
the students’ language is full of words related to set goals, targets, hopes
and aspirations, dreams, vision, performance and non-performance,
achievement, factors and control. These indicators amount to a
participation in the discourses and logics of the market, consumption,
commodification and profitability. As the study points out, students’
experiencing turned into beliefs about consumption and the market. Thus,
for some students, satisfaction comes only when the courses in which they
are participating and the grades they attain in the courses fit the jobs and
the job descriptions that they have set their targets to do in future.
Participation in schooling is therefore about being fashioned for a market.
With this belief, their attitudes and their postures are informed by the logic
of the market.
Description
Ghana Social Science Journal, 15(2)
Keywords
Failure, desire, examinations, targets and goals, experiencing, consciousness, attitudinizing, acting