Declined quality? A poststructural policy analysis of the ‘quality problem’ in Taiwanese higher education

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Abstract

The tension between broadening university capacity and maintain-ing quality is a global phenomenon. While numerous studies have analysed the enactments of various policies that aimed to address declining university quality, few have examined the underlying beliefs that define what is conceptualised as a ‘quality problem’ within the policy proposals. Utilising Carol Bacchi’s ‘What’s the Problem Represented to be?’ (WPR) approach, this study provides a nuanced analysis of this issue, centring on an underexplored aspect: how the ‘quality’ is made to be a particular kind of problem within a specific policy. Specifically, it scrutinises an uncommon policy in Taiwan – proposing the reduction of university places as a solution to declining quality – to critically analyse what quality is established as ‘reality’ that set limits on how higher education can be thought. A central thesis of this analysis is that higher education system comes into existence through ongoing formation as specific kind of object rather than existing as a fixed entity. Understanding the construction of quality problem and the objectification of higher education requires a critical examination of the underlying assumptions and a detailed mapping of heterogeneous practices that create forms of authority for certain perceptions of ‘quality’ accepted as true.
Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Education Policy
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 22 May 2024

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