It’s About Time, Part II: Does Time Poverty Contribute to Inequitable College Outcomes by Gender and Race/Ethnicity?

IF 3.5 3区 教育学 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Aera Open Pub Date : 2024-03-22 DOI:10.1177/23328584241237971
Claire Wladis, Alyse C. Hachey, Katherine M. Conway
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Abstract

Existing research demonstrates gender- and race/ethnicity-based inequities in college outcomes. Separately, recent research suggests a relationship between time poverty and college outcomes for student parents and online students. However, to date, no studies have empirically explored whether differential access to time as a resource for college may explain differential outcomes by gender or race/ethnicity. To address this, this study explored the relationship between time poverty, gender or race/ethnicity, and college outcomes at a large urban public university with two and four year campuses. Time poverty explained a significant proportion of differential outcomes (retention and credit accumulation) by gender and race/ethnicity. More time-poor groups also dedicated a larger proportion of their (relatively limited) discretionary time to their education, suggesting that inequitable distributions of time may contribute to other negative outcomes (e.g., reduced time for sleep, exercise, healthcare). This suggests that time poverty is a significant but understudied equity issue in higher education.
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是时候了,第二部分:时间贫困是否会导致不同性别和种族/族裔的大学教育结果不公平?
现有研究表明,在大学学习成绩方面存在基于性别和种族/民族的不平等现象。另外,最近的研究表明,学生家长和在线学生的时间贫困与大学成绩之间存在关系。然而,迄今为止,还没有任何研究以实证的方式探讨了不同性别或种族/族裔的人在获取时间作为大学资源方面的差异是否可以解释不同的结果。为了解决这个问题,本研究在一所拥有两年制和四年制校区的大型城市公立大学探讨了时间贫困、性别或种族/族裔与大学成绩之间的关系。时间贫困在很大程度上解释了性别和种族/族裔的不同结果(保留率和学分积累)。更多的时间贫困群体还将他们(相对有限的)可自由支配时间的更大比例用于教育,这表明不公平的时间分配可能会导致其他负面结果(如睡眠、锻炼和保健时间减少)。这表明,时间贫乏是高等教育中一个重要的公平问题,但却未得到充分研究。
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来源期刊
Aera Open
Aera Open EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
7.10%
发文量
60
审稿时长
15 weeks
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