Research into Higher Education Abstracts exists to
propagate knowledge about, and encourage discussion of, significant
research into higher education. Published by Routledge on behalf of
the Society for Research into Higher Education, it provides a
regular survey of international periodicals relevant to the theory
and practice of higher education and also offers a selective
coverage of books and monographs. More than 600 abstracts are
produced each year.
They are grouped under eight headings; national systems and
comparative studies, institutional management, curriculum
(including subject studies with wider relevance), research,
students, staff, finance and physical resources and contributory
studies (including research design and methodologies). A key word
subject index in each volume allows easy reference to those which
cross category boundaries. An author index and a list of
journals, with addresses, from which abstracts are drawn are also
included in each issue, with a cumulative index annually. This
index will include all countries that provide a key context for
work reported (except the UK and USA), subject context where
relevant, the research methods (e.g. focus groups, surveys,
action research) and instruments used, theoretical bases, and key
themes from sections of the abstracts other than the one where
any entry appears.
Research into Higher Education Abstracts gives a
major emphasis to work published in, or dealing with, provision
in Europe and the British Commonwealth, reflecting the identities
of its operational base. It will also cover selected texts from
elsewhere in the world, including the USA. Readers may wish to
note the existence of a similar journal Higher Education
Abstracts, published by Claremont Graduate School, California,
USA, which gives emphasis to work published in the USA.
The editor welcomes suggestions for journals to abstract to
extend our coverage in appropriate academic and geographic
domains. Offers to provide such abstracts are even more welcome.
Research into Higher Education Abstracts can be
accessed by institutional subscribers and SRHE members via the
Search tab above, or via Educational Research
Abstracts online (ERA). Direct institutional subscribers can
view the current year's abstracts, while SRHE members are able to
access the full archive of Research into Higher Education
Abstracts dating back to 1966. In addition, all
subscibers and SRHE members receive the three print issues which
constitute the current volume. This includes a cumulative author
and subject index.
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