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and the links between the formal, informal, and campus (part of the hidden, Cotton et al. 2020) curriculum (Hopkinson et al. 2008). This section explores these connections within the context of the SSH project and how the connections can be used to maximize learning.

      The degree of university (or Students' Union) involvement in informal and non‐formal curricula can vary widely, as can the different learning communities that students create and engage with (Gramatakos and Lavau 2019). These range from top‐down designed and managed, but non‐credit bearing, official schemes (non‐formal curriculum), to structures, support, training, and recognition for student‐led societies, to the range of university‐linked activities in which students might be engaged that can be invisible to staff (informal curriculum; Table 2.1). The SSH project on which reflections in this chapter draw has moved in time from the non‐formal end of the informal spectrum, where although student‐initiated and non‐credit bearing, staff were more closely involved and had expectations of student reporting, to a more informal context, with no real external accountability requirements. Staff still take a key role in promoting the SSH project to recruit new students, and hence the project can be viewed still as having non‐formal elements.

      Activist learning activities situated in the formal curriculum have the advantage of providing scaffolding of support for students. The student in the second year of the project who expressed dissatisfaction at how much was achieved, referred to a number of challenges that they felt affected what the project achieved. This included the perception of limited commitment of others in the house, difficulties with communication, and resignation that they were unable to come up with ideas:

      I'm not very much of an ideas person, which I think is another issue with me living in the bungalow this year because I am a doer rather than a thinker.

      (Student 3, Year 2 of project)

      In a formal curriculum setting, several of these issues could have been addressed with staff support to help manage group challenges and help provide inspiration for action. However, in the context of the project being entirely student‐led and centered around their own private time and living spaces, any communication of difficulties and requests for support needed to be student driven.

      The interviews with students demonstrated little reflection on learning beyond surface level knowledge and skill development. A lack of reflection in activism has the danger of being labeled as “naive activism,” devoid of reflection and purpose (Costa et al. 2021b). Within the formal curriculum, formal reflective assessment, scaffolded by training in reflective and critical thinking, may have helped students to develop further as true activist learners.

      Yet, if activist learning is situated firmly in the formal curriculum, this undoubtedly will have its challenges. Student 2, who expressed the most externally focused activist goals for the project, saw a value to the project in being:

      a place to make mistakes.

      (Student 2, Year 2 of project)

      A project for academic credit does not leave that same space for mistakes and failure or for unplanned and spontaneous experimentation. Requiring activism of students in a course, inherently requires risk for the students (Bubriski and Semaan 2009; Ludlow 2010). One could argue that reflective assessments in the formal curriculum, could provide the opportunity for failure where the assessment is based on reflection rather than the project outcome itself, yet failure that takes the form of diminishing interest and motivation and burnout – real challenges in activist projects – would undoubtedly impact on a credit‐bearing assessment. Student activist projects clearly come with challenges for the students involved. Activism located in the informal curriculum at least allows students to step away from projects if the pressures become too great, although this could compound pressures on other students still committed to the project.

Advantages Disadvantages
Formal curriculum Staff support to help students through a range of issuesOpportunity for formal reflection to enable engagement with deeper systemic issues and enhance articulation of learningEasier to ensure continuity of project(s) (where this is desirable)Easier to develop and maintain trusted relationships with external stakeholdersReduces competing time pressures for students as contributes to academic creditCan be more inclusive of diverse participantsMay be an easier entry point of activism for some students Difficult to allow failure in the ways associated with real‐world activismIf projects are staff‐initiated projects may be less meaningful to students reducing “motive fulfillment”Creates a greater focus on individual grades, rather than community gains or project outcomesStudents may still not develop agency to drive their own projects if relying on staff support
Non‐formal Can include requirements for reflectionInclusive of diverse participantsIncludes some staff supportMay be an easier entry point of activism for some studentsVoluntary nature of opportunities mean students will be motivated by projectLittle implication of failure (to student) Reduces student agencyStudents may still not develop agency to drive their own projects if relying on staff supportRequires opportunities to be developed which are of interest to diverse studentsOpt‐in and might not interest/impact large numbers of students
Informal curriculum Enables creativity and agency of students to act on their own inspirationProvides a space for failure and experimentationAllows students to disengage if needed for their own well‐beingReliance on peer support and learningPotential for more working in a more genuinely collaborative way, in contrast to the sometimes more individualized, competitive ethos of formal education Can be cliquey and exclude more diverse participantsMight involve more limited