Employment and the Structure of Colleges as Barriers to College Match and Degree Completion for Latinx First-Generation College Students

IF 0.9 Q3 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Journal of Latinos and Education Pub Date : 2023-11-06 DOI:10.1080/15348431.2023.2274856
Laura Nichols, Maria Valle
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Abstract

ABSTRACTUndermatching, or students attending less selective colleges than they are academically qualified to attend, is seen as a contributing factor to the lagging college completion rate of low-income and first-generation college students. Addressing the mismatch has been mainly limited to the individual level. Through analysis of interview and longitudinal school administrative data with aspiring first-generation college low-income Latinx youth who started preparing to attend college in middle school, we find that the need to work, which students started doing in high school, was a major factor in students’ undermatching. We show how employment collides with the structure of colleges as racialized organizations (Ray, 2019), especially matching colleges with high graduation rates. Selective colleges did not provide the support students needed to address their financial situations, and students attending schools to which they undermatched required more assistance navigating work and schools to stop them from dropping out. We also discuss program and policy solutions to address the low college completion rates of Latinx first-generation college students more fully as well as how to better support their need to work.KEYWORDS: First-generation collegecollege matchcollege completionemploymentLatinxLatino/aracialized organizationsworking students AcknowledgmentsThank you to those who participated in this study as interviewees and staff at the middle school who helped us reach out to school alumni. Thank you also to those who gave feedback on earlier versions of the article, especially Rachelle Brunn-Bevel.Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Research ethicsThis research protocol went through and passed human subjects review. The research has been conducted consistent with the ethical standards articulated in the 1964 Declaration of Helsinki and its subsequent amendments and Section 12 of the ASA’s Code of Ethics. All participants were informed of the purpose of the research and their rights as research participants. Informed consent was given by all interviewees.Notes1 All school and student names are pseudonyms.
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就业和大学结构作为拉丁裔第一代大学生大学匹配和学位完成的障碍
【摘要】不匹配(undermatching),即学生选择的大学比他们的学术资格要少,被认为是低收入和第一代大学生大学完成率落后的一个因素。解决不匹配问题主要局限于个人层面。通过对从中学开始准备上大学的有抱负的第一代大学低收入拉丁裔青年的访谈和纵向学校管理数据的分析,我们发现学生在高中开始做的工作需求是学生不匹配的主要因素。我们展示了就业如何与大学作为种族化组织的结构相冲突(Ray, 2019),特别是与高毕业率的大学相匹配。名牌大学不能为学生提供解决经济状况所需的支持,而就读于与自己不匹配的学校的学生在工作和学校方面需要更多的帮助,以防止他们辍学。我们还讨论了项目和政策解决方案,以更充分地解决拉丁裔第一代大学生大学毕业率低的问题,以及如何更好地支持他们的工作需求。关键词:第一代大学生大学匹配大学毕业就业拉丁裔拉丁裔/非拉丁裔组织在职学生致谢感谢参与本研究的受访者和帮助我们联系校友的中学工作人员。也感谢那些对文章早期版本提供反馈的人,尤其是Rachelle Brunn-Bevel。披露声明作者未报告潜在的利益冲突。研究伦理本研究方案经过并通过了人体受试者审查。这项研究符合1964年《赫尔辛基宣言》及其随后的修正案和ASA《道德守则》第12节所阐述的道德标准。所有参与者都被告知研究的目的和他们作为研究参与者的权利。所有受访者均给予知情同意。注1所有学校及学生名称均为笔名。
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来源期刊
Journal of Latinos and Education
Journal of Latinos and Education EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
11.10%
发文量
87
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