Student Success (Aug 2021)

Learning, Unlearning, and Relearning Together: Unmasking Power in a Students as Partners Program using Collaborative Autoethnography

  • Sakinah S J Alhadad,
  • Daniela Vasco,
  • Jude C Williams,
  • Pauline Dizon,
  • Rachel L Kapnias,
  • Saira B Khan,
  • Hayley Payne,
  • Bronte C Simpson,
  • Chantelle D Warren

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5204/ssj.1934
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 2
pp. 38 – 50

Abstract

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We interrogated a students as partners (SaP), co-curricular program that focuses on supporting student learning. To center power and equity in SaP, the program was grounded in social design-based experiment methodology. We considered the manifestation of power and equity beyond higher education, to that of broader socio-political contexts. Collaborative autoethnography (CAE) was used to garner a richer understanding of student-staff experiences of the program. Through CAE, power emerged as central to our collective experiences, and a recognition that power asymmetry in students as partners programs is complex and multi-layered. We found that to address power imbalances in these programs requires considered strategies and intentional designs. Further, CAE, in and of itself, can be a powerful way to foster self-awareness, mutual trust, respect, and the acknowledgement of others in student-staff partnerships. We conclude by recommending the importance of deliberate design for equity and power towards consequential learning and transformational change.

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