Manja Klemenčič
Manja Klemenčič researches, teaches, advises and acts as a consultant in the area of sociology and politics of higher education, European and international comparative higher education. Her major research contribution is in the study of student governments and student representation in higher education which is part of her broader research agenda on student agency and the impact of students on higher education; as well as on student-centred learning and teaching in higher education. Her current research focuses on transformative potential of the European University alliances, and on students’ capabilities to navigate and influence the opportunities offered by the European University alliances. Her research seeks to correct the one-directional study of college impact on students. She is partnering with the Global Student Forum in mapping student representative associations and student politics and representation in higher education governance globally in the largests ever international comparative research on this topic which culminated in open-access The Bloomsbury Handbook of Student Politics and Representation in Higher Education (2024).
Manja Klemenčič is Associate Senior Lecturer on Sociology offering courses in Sociology of Higher Education at the Department of Sociology, Faculty of Arts and Sciences, Harvard University and in General Education at Faculty of Arts and Sciences. She is local affiliate at the Minda de Gunzburg Center for European Studies at Harvard University. Klemenčič is also an external associate researcher at the Centre for Educational Policy Studies, Faculty of Education at University of Ljubljana.
Klemenčič has over 140 publications and over 80 keynotes and invited lectures on a broad array of topics, including student-centered learning and teaching, quality assurance and institutional research, civic role of higher education, academic profession, internationalization of higher education, and different aspects of higher education policies and reforms in Europe, Central and Eastern Europe, the Western Balkans and in Slovenia. Among her latest publications are
- The Bloomsbury Handbook of Student Politics and Representation in Higher Education (Bloomsbury Education, February 2024), which she edited and provided a chapter on key concepts in study of student politics and representation;
- The Routledge Handbook of Student Centered Learning and Teaching in Higher Education (Routledge, 2020, co-edited with Sabine Hoidn), in which she also contributed chapters on student agency and actorhood in student centered learning and teaching and on designing and evaluating the student centered ecosystems in higher education;
- The International Encyclopedia of Higher Education Systems and Institutions (Springer Nature, 2020, co-editor and thematic editor of the section on Mass and Elite Higher Education), in which she also contributed entries on student politics, student governments, student campus employees, alternative higher education and the effects of the higher education expansion on students.
Her three staple courses offered at Harvard (GENED1039 Higher Education: Students, Institutions, and Controversies; SOCIOL1104 Sociology of Higher Education; and SOCIOL1130 Student Leadership and Service in Higher Education) have repeatedly won Harvard’s awards for teaching excellence. Six times she was voted as one of the most impactful professors by the the Harvard College graduating class (’19, ’20, '21, '22, '23 and '24) featured by the Harvard Yearbook Publications. In 2020, she won John R. Marquand Award for Excellence in Advising and Support to Students at Faculty of Arts and Sciences, Harvard University. In 2021, she was the receipient of the Phi Beta Kappa Alpha-Iota Prize for Excellence in Teaching (Harvard College's Academic Honor Society) at Harvard College, Faculty of Arts and Sciences.
From 2014-2021, Klemenčič served as Editor-in-Chief of European Journal of Higher Education published by Routledge/Taylor&Francis, and in 2022, Marco Seeber joined her as Joint Editor-in-Chief. Since 2015, Klemenčič serves as Co-Editor (with Paul Ashwin) of the academic book series Understanding Student Experiences of Higher Education published by Bloomsbury, and since 2022 as Co-Editor (with Peter Maasen) of academic book series Higher Education Dynamics published by Springer Nature. Klemenčič regularly acts as a consultant for the European Commission of the European Union, UNESCO, the World Bank, national governments, quality assurance agencies and higher education stakeholder association on higher education policies and instruments.
Native of Slovenia, Klemenčič resides in Cambridge, Massachusetts with her husband Professor Khaled El Rouayheb, two children and two cats. In 2023-2024, Klemenčič will be on leave as Visiting Professor of Higher Education at Faculty of Education, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia pursuing research on student agency and the European University alliances.
Manja Klemenčič is Associate Senior Lecturer on Sociology offering courses in Sociology of Higher Education at the Department of Sociology, Faculty of Arts and Sciences, Harvard University and in General Education at Faculty of Arts and Sciences. She is local affiliate at the Minda de Gunzburg Center for European Studies at Harvard University. Klemenčič is also an external associate researcher at the Centre for Educational Policy Studies, Faculty of Education at University of Ljubljana.
Klemenčič has over 140 publications and over 80 keynotes and invited lectures on a broad array of topics, including student-centered learning and teaching, quality assurance and institutional research, civic role of higher education, academic profession, internationalization of higher education, and different aspects of higher education policies and reforms in Europe, Central and Eastern Europe, the Western Balkans and in Slovenia. Among her latest publications are
- The Bloomsbury Handbook of Student Politics and Representation in Higher Education (Bloomsbury Education, February 2024), which she edited and provided a chapter on key concepts in study of student politics and representation;
- The Routledge Handbook of Student Centered Learning and Teaching in Higher Education (Routledge, 2020, co-edited with Sabine Hoidn), in which she also contributed chapters on student agency and actorhood in student centered learning and teaching and on designing and evaluating the student centered ecosystems in higher education;
- The International Encyclopedia of Higher Education Systems and Institutions (Springer Nature, 2020, co-editor and thematic editor of the section on Mass and Elite Higher Education), in which she also contributed entries on student politics, student governments, student campus employees, alternative higher education and the effects of the higher education expansion on students.
Her three staple courses offered at Harvard (GENED1039 Higher Education: Students, Institutions, and Controversies; SOCIOL1104 Sociology of Higher Education; and SOCIOL1130 Student Leadership and Service in Higher Education) have repeatedly won Harvard’s awards for teaching excellence. Six times she was voted as one of the most impactful professors by the the Harvard College graduating class (’19, ’20, '21, '22, '23 and '24) featured by the Harvard Yearbook Publications. In 2020, she won John R. Marquand Award for Excellence in Advising and Support to Students at Faculty of Arts and Sciences, Harvard University. In 2021, she was the receipient of the Phi Beta Kappa Alpha-Iota Prize for Excellence in Teaching (Harvard College's Academic Honor Society) at Harvard College, Faculty of Arts and Sciences.
From 2014-2021, Klemenčič served as Editor-in-Chief of European Journal of Higher Education published by Routledge/Taylor&Francis, and in 2022, Marco Seeber joined her as Joint Editor-in-Chief. Since 2015, Klemenčič serves as Co-Editor (with Paul Ashwin) of the academic book series Understanding Student Experiences of Higher Education published by Bloomsbury, and since 2022 as Co-Editor (with Peter Maasen) of academic book series Higher Education Dynamics published by Springer Nature. Klemenčič regularly acts as a consultant for the European Commission of the European Union, UNESCO, the World Bank, national governments, quality assurance agencies and higher education stakeholder association on higher education policies and instruments.
Native of Slovenia, Klemenčič resides in Cambridge, Massachusetts with her husband Professor Khaled El Rouayheb, two children and two cats. In 2023-2024, Klemenčič will be on leave as Visiting Professor of Higher Education at Faculty of Education, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia pursuing research on student agency and the European University alliances.
less
InterestsView All (20)
Uploads
The challenges that the representative student organisations face across Europe allude to several plausible interrelated causes. One is that of rising vocationalist orientation of students that are increasingly concerned about their present and future financial sustainability in view of the global financial crisis and the (concomitant) reduced employment opportunities coupled with the rising personal burden of financing their education. The other is the growing distance between the political decisions taken by the political elites and those of their constituency. This trend is not only pertinent to national politics, but indeed also to student politics. The low turn-outs in student elections and the rise in student movements suggest a detachment of the student body from the representative student organisations, their politics and policies."
"Student participation in HE governance is considered one of the foundational values in European HE. It can be traced back to the medieval universities and it resurged with the student revolts in 1960ies.Today, students as a collective body are in some way represented in HE governance in basically every European country. Accordingly we can find advanced – but also highly diversified – multilevel systems of student representation. The issue of student participation in HE governance has featured prominently in policy making within the Bologna Process. The European Ministers referred to student participation in affirmative terms in every Communiqué after the Prague Ministerial Summit in 2001. European Students’ Union [ESU], the representative platform of the European national unions of students, was granted a consultative membership and has participated in the governing structures of the Process. Yet, despite this high political involvement, ESU continues to report deteriorating student influence when it comes to institutional governance. This raises questions about the interactions and interrelations between student participation as a concept and social phenomenon and EHEA policy developments. The chapter addresses the ideational and normative foundations regarding student participation emerging from the two – intertwined - policy developments: the Bologna Process and the ‘modernisation agenda for universities’. In view of these developments, it investigates changes in the conception of student participation as depicted in the four main relationship constellations involving students: between the state and students, between university and students, between the academics and students, and between student representatives and students.
Keywords: student participation/involvement, formal participation, informal participation, student representation, student experience, representative student organisations, quality assurance, student centred learning, HE policy, HE reforms, European Students’ Union [ESU], EHEA principles.
"
It is within this environment that we examine teaching and learning in higher education, in order to explore what we know and how to move forward. European cooperation to advance teaching and learning has been fragmented and lacked an overarching strategy. At the level of national policy, there appears to be unevenness in teaching and learning initiatives among European governments.
The challenges that the representative student organisations face across Europe allude to several plausible interrelated causes. One is that of rising vocationalist orientation of students that are increasingly concerned about their present and future financial sustainability in view of the global financial crisis and the (concomitant) reduced employment opportunities coupled with the rising personal burden of financing their education. The other is the growing distance between the political decisions taken by the political elites and those of their constituency. This trend is not only pertinent to national politics, but indeed also to student politics. The low turn-outs in student elections and the rise in student movements suggest a detachment of the student body from the representative student organisations, their politics and policies."
"Student participation in HE governance is considered one of the foundational values in European HE. It can be traced back to the medieval universities and it resurged with the student revolts in 1960ies.Today, students as a collective body are in some way represented in HE governance in basically every European country. Accordingly we can find advanced – but also highly diversified – multilevel systems of student representation. The issue of student participation in HE governance has featured prominently in policy making within the Bologna Process. The European Ministers referred to student participation in affirmative terms in every Communiqué after the Prague Ministerial Summit in 2001. European Students’ Union [ESU], the representative platform of the European national unions of students, was granted a consultative membership and has participated in the governing structures of the Process. Yet, despite this high political involvement, ESU continues to report deteriorating student influence when it comes to institutional governance. This raises questions about the interactions and interrelations between student participation as a concept and social phenomenon and EHEA policy developments. The chapter addresses the ideational and normative foundations regarding student participation emerging from the two – intertwined - policy developments: the Bologna Process and the ‘modernisation agenda for universities’. In view of these developments, it investigates changes in the conception of student participation as depicted in the four main relationship constellations involving students: between the state and students, between university and students, between the academics and students, and between student representatives and students.
Keywords: student participation/involvement, formal participation, informal participation, student representation, student experience, representative student organisations, quality assurance, student centred learning, HE policy, HE reforms, European Students’ Union [ESU], EHEA principles.
"
It is within this environment that we examine teaching and learning in higher education, in order to explore what we know and how to move forward. European cooperation to advance teaching and learning has been fragmented and lacked an overarching strategy. At the level of national policy, there appears to be unevenness in teaching and learning initiatives among European governments.
The handbook re-examines and further develops the existing theoretical concepts on student agency and student impact on higher education, and analytical lenses on systems of student representation and organisational models of student governments. It depicts empirical insights from 25 countries from all world regions, 4 transnational regional student federations and the Global Student Forum. The volume is unique in bringing together established scholars with a highly diverse group of current and former student leaders, specially trained and empowered to conduct research for this handbook. It offers a major contribution to the study of higher education, and politics and governance of higher education specifically.
The ebook editions of this book are available open access under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence on bloomsburycollections.com.