Economic Ideology and Higher Education
Explores how the drive for a knowledge-based economy shapes institutional expectations of student labour.
The integration of platform-based labour within the higher education experience reflects shifting paradigms of graduate skill acquisition and economic participation. This synthesis examines the intersection of digital work models and academic requirements to delineate the evolving nature of student employment in the Australian context.
The expansion of the platform economy fundamentally alters the student experience by creating a structural conflict between institutional skill-development mandates and the immediate economic pressures facing the modern Australian undergraduate.
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Explores how the drive for a knowledge-based economy shapes institutional expectations of student labour.
Outlines the systematic review of existing scholarly literature and Australian policy frameworks regarding student work.
Examines the conflict between academic skill development and the rise of platform-mediated work roles.
Connects the analysis to academic or practical value without overclaiming.
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The evidence suggests that the pressure to insert graduates into the labour market drives a re-evaluation of how higher education institutions perceive student time [2]. While innovative teaching in virtual environments has historically fostered new collaborative modes [3], the rise of platform work introduces a competing demand for student attention. The analysis identifies a persistent tension between the institutional goal of high-level skill acquisition and the economic reality of precarious digital employment, suggesting that current policies may insufficiently address the impact of such work on academic outcomes.
This analysis employs a desk-research method, synthesising peer-reviewed literature and governmental policy documents to delineate the role of student labour within the Australian platform economy. By focusing on the ideological assumptions embedded in knowledge-based economy models [2], the study contrasts traditional employment pathways with contemporary digital-mediated engagements. Limitations include the rapid evolution of platform infrastructure, which necessitates a focus on structural trends rather than fleeting market fluctuations.
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First M. Last
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Dr. First Last
The contemporary Australian higher education landscape is increasingly defined by the nexus between academic pursuits and the broadening platform economy. As universities strive to align graduate outputs with the demands of a knowledge-based economy, the traditional boundaries of student employment are becoming increasingly porous [2].
The challenge lies in reconciling the ideological pursuit of skill development with the realities of precarious digital labour. Academic institutions must navigate the tension between fostering scholarly engagement and addressing the economic imperatives that drive students toward platform-mediated work environments, a shift that requires critical institutional oversight [2, 3].
This synthesis aims to provide a critical overview of how platform work interacts with the Australian educational experience. By analysing existing literature and policy frameworks, this document clarifies the structural shift in student labour, offering a synthesis that informs future discourse on graduate skill acquisition, institutional responsibility, and the long-term sustainability of the student-worker model within the national economy.
SFS 5989 (Finnish Citation)