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Connecting to Post-College Life and Locating Success 连接后大学生活和定位成功
Pub Date : 2020-09-17 DOI: 10.1093/oso/9780190848156.003.0007
J. Benson, Elizabeth M. Lee
Chapter 7 shows how campus geographies expose students to different models of success (or not) and shape their strategies for attaining that success. Play Hard students learn early not to prioritize academic outcomes above friendships and social life but rather to focus on building powerful networks with more affluent friends through parties, team sports, and Greek Life. Work Hard students, by contrast, remain in more class-segregated spaces, meaning they have less exposure to peers with upper-class habituses. They prioritize building their formal resume, connections with faculty, and having high grade point averages, which guide their decisions both academically and in terms of the kinds of extracurricular opportunities they seek out. Multisphere students rely on both academic and network strategies and seem to be comfortable navigating each, while Disconnected students struggle to locate a clear and consistent route toward post-college success and plan to rely on themselves.
第7章展示了校园地理如何让学生接触到不同的成功模式(或不成功模式),并塑造他们获得成功的策略。Play Hard的学生很早就学会了不要把学业成绩放在友谊和社交生活之上,而是通过聚会、团队运动和联谊会生活,专注于与更富有的朋友建立强大的网络。相比之下,“努力工作”的学生仍然生活在更加阶级隔离的空间里,这意味着他们很少接触到有上层社会习惯的同龄人。他们优先考虑的是建立正式的简历,与教师的联系,以及拥有较高的平均绩点,这些都指导着他们在学术上和寻找课外机会方面的决定。“多领域”的学生既依赖于学术策略,也依赖于人际关系策略,而且似乎能自如地驾驭这两种策略,而“孤立”的学生则很难找到一条通往大学毕业后成功的清晰而一致的路线,并计划依靠自己。
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引用次数: 0
Play Hard 全力以赴!
Pub Date : 2020-09-17 DOI: 10.1093/oso/9780190848156.003.0003
Janel E. Benson, Elizabeth M. Lee
Chapter 3 focuses on first-generation students who fit a Play Hard geography. Although academic achievement is important for many Play Hard students, it is less of a driver in students’ lives than for those in other geographies. Students arrange their lives more around leisure, participating in high-status social venues of athletics and/or Greek Letter Organizations where they meet more peers from more affluent and continuing-generation families than those in other geographies. Most who entered a Play Hard geography participate in athletics and/or attended a private high school. The small percentage of first-generation students who make their way into a Play Hard geography includes the greatest variation of experience along gender and racialized lines. Students located in a Play Hard geography experience varying levels of comfort, often participating at a steep cost to their sense of self-esteem or enjoyment.
第三章重点介绍了适合Play Hard地理的第一代学生。尽管学业成绩对许多Play Hard学生来说很重要,但与其他地区的学生相比,学业成绩对学生生活的影响较小。与其他地区的学生相比,学生们更多地将生活安排在休闲活动上,参加体育运动和/或希腊字母组织等高地位的社交场所,在那里他们会遇到更多来自更富裕和传世家庭的同龄人。大多数进入Play Hard地理项目的学生参加了体育运动和/或上了私立高中。第一代学生进入Play Hard地理位置的比例很小,其中性别和种族的经历差异最大。位于Play Hard地理位置的学生体验到不同程度的舒适,通常会让他们的自尊或享受付出巨大的代价。
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引用次数: 1
First-Generation Students at Selective Colleges 名牌大学的第一代学生
Pub Date : 2020-09-17 DOI: 10.1093/oso/9780190848156.003.0002
J. Benson, Elizabeth M. Lee
Chapter 2 provides a portrait of first-generation students who attend selective colleges by placing them in comparison with continuing-generation students, the dominant demographic group on these campuses. This chapter focuses on students’ high school backgrounds—the ways they get to college—and then discusses briefly the ways this background leads them into an initial institutional sorting process. While first-generation students share a similarly strong high school academic profile as their continuing-generation counterparts, they come of age within very different contexts. The authors show that some of these differences have implications for how first-generation students identify connections on campus during the first few weeks of college. Moreover, first-generation students find themselves in somewhat different campus geographies than continuing-generation at the end of their first year of college. First-generation are more likely to be Disconnected than their continuing-generation peers and less embedded in campus geographies connected to mainstream social life (Play Hard and Multisphere).
第二章提供了进入名牌大学的第一代学生的画像,将他们与这些大学中占主导地位的第二代学生进行比较。本章主要关注学生的高中背景——他们上大学的方式,然后简要讨论了这种背景如何引导他们进入最初的机构分类过程。虽然第一代学生和他们的后辈有着同样强大的高中学业背景,但他们的成长环境却截然不同。作者表示,这些差异中的一些影响了第一代学生在大学最初几周如何识别校园里的联系。此外,第一代学生在大学一年级结束时发现自己所处的校园地理位置与第二代学生有所不同。与他们的后辈相比,第一代更有可能与外界隔绝,更少融入到与主流社会生活(Play Hard和Multisphere)相连的校园地理环境中。
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引用次数: 0
Conclusion 结论
Pub Date : 2020-09-17 DOI: 10.1093/oso/9780190848156.003.0008
J. Benson, Elizabeth M. Lee
Chapter 8 recaps the primary takeaways and discusses their implications for selective campuses. While campuses and scholarly literature generally treat first-generation students as a cohesive whole, this book speaks to a much more complicated process whereby students’ intersectional identities and preferences work along with institutional structures to sort first-generation students into one of several campus geographies that then lead to different types of connections with faculty, peers, extracurricular activities, and social engagements. Campus geographies are important because they provide informal social knowledge, tools, resources, and inclinations that may be more or less helpful both in college and as they prepare for post-college life. The authors close by discussing the implications of this research for selective colleges wishing to support a range of first-generation students more successfully.
第8章概述了主要结论,并讨论了它们对选择性大学的影响。虽然校园和学术文献通常将第一代学生视为一个有凝聚力的整体,但这本书讲述了一个更复杂的过程,即学生的交叉身份和偏好与制度结构一起工作,将第一代学生分类为几个校园地理之一,然后导致与教师,同龄人,课外活动和社会交往的不同类型的联系。校园地理很重要,因为它提供了非正式的社会知识、工具、资源和倾向,这些或多或少对他们在大学和为毕业后的生活做准备都有帮助。作者最后讨论了这项研究对希望更成功地支持一系列第一代学生的名牌大学的影响。
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引用次数: 0
Work Hard 努力工作
Pub Date : 2020-09-17 DOI: 10.1093/oso/9780190848156.003.0004
J. Benson, Elizabeth M. Lee
Chapter 4 describes first-generation students in a Work Hard geography. These academically engaged students made not only classes and homework central to their daily lives, but their friendships and social lives also were often rooted in either academic work and/or nonathletic extracurricular interests. Work Hard students report close faculty relationships and strong friendships, often with those from similar demographic backgrounds, but they are also lonely outside those spheres, avoiding the high-status social hubs of campus. Most students in this geography came through Summer Bridge, and much of their campus engagement is in reaction to the racism, classism, and sexism they feel and observe on campus. They have created friendship communities that provide affirmation and support and crafted geographies that link their social, extracurricular, and academic priorities. The overlap of these spaces provides a buffer but does not connect these students to wealthier peers.
第四章描述了《勤奋地理》中的第一代学生。这些在学术上投入的学生不仅把课堂和家庭作业作为日常生活的中心,而且他们的友谊和社交生活也往往植根于学术工作和/或非运动的课外兴趣。勤奋工作的学生报告说,他们与教师关系密切,友谊深厚,通常是与那些人口背景相似的人,但在这些领域之外,他们也很孤独,避开了校园中地位较高的社交中心。这个地区的大多数学生都是通过“夏桥”来的,他们的校园活动大多是对他们在校园里感受到和观察到的种族主义、阶级歧视和性别歧视的反应。他们创建了提供肯定和支持的友谊社区,并精心设计了将他们的社交、课外和学术重点联系起来的地理位置。这些空间的重叠提供了缓冲,但并没有将这些学生与富裕的同龄人联系起来。
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引用次数: 0
Disconnected 断开连接
Pub Date : 2020-09-17 DOI: 10.1093/oso/9780190848156.003.0006
Janel E. Benson, Elizabeth M. Lee
Chapter 6 provides an overview of students in a Disconnected geography. Consistent with previous research, the largest portion of the National Longitudinal Survey of Freshmen sample are Disconnected. These students, while academically motivated and interested in a social life, struggled to make connections or find a niche, whether through classes, clubs, or social circles. One important commonality among Disconnected respondents was a delay in forming friendships: These students could not form early connections and described how difficult it was to make friends after the initial rush of being new together with other first-year students. Most students in Disconnected geographies did not participate in a substantial precollege program, wading into campus life on their own. Many of our Disconnected respondents were unhappy and unable to locate comfortable spaces on campus, in some cases despite long-term efforts to find a sense of belonging.
第6章提供了学生在一个断开的地理概述。与之前的研究一致,全国新生纵向调查样本中大部分是断开的。这些学生虽然在学术上有动力,对社交生活感兴趣,但无论是通过课程、俱乐部还是社交圈,他们都很难建立联系或找到合适的位置。在被调查者中,有一个重要的共同点是在建立友谊方面有延迟:这些学生无法建立早期的联系,并描述了在与其他一年级学生一起度过最初的匆忙之后,交朋友是多么困难。大多数来自偏远地区的学生都没有参加过实质性的大学预科课程,而是独自进入校园生活。我们的许多“断开”的受访者都不开心,无法在校园里找到舒适的空间,在某些情况下,尽管长期努力寻找归属感。
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引用次数: 19
Multisphere
Pub Date : 2020-09-17 DOI: 10.1093/oso/9780190848156.003.0005
J. Benson, Elizabeth M. Lee
Chapter 5 focuses on Multisphere students who incorporated elements from both Work Hard and Play Hard geographies, balancing serious academic work, strong extracurricular involvement, and social lives in high-status venues. Most Multisphere students arrived on campus through targeted orientation programs. While these led to early and lasting friendships, Multisphere respondents’ campus acclimation processes are distinguished by a pattern of branching out, locating strong peer ties in varied social locations. The way that students in this geography float among different spheres, able to be comfortable and successful in each, makes this the most fluid of the campus geographies. There are few first-generation students in this geography, and the authors think of them in some ways as being both outliers and examples of what is possible for first-generation students.
第5章关注的是“多领域”学生,他们结合了“努力工作”和“尽情玩耍”的地理元素,平衡了严肃的学术工作、丰富的课外活动和高地位场所的社会生活。大多数多领域学生都是通过定向培训项目来到校园的。虽然这些导致了早期和持久的友谊,但Multisphere受访者的校园适应过程的特点是扩展模式,在不同的社会场所找到强大的同伴关系。学生们漂浮在不同的领域中,能够在每个领域中感到舒适和成功,这使其成为校园地理中最具流动性的区域。在这个地区,第一代学生很少,作者认为他们在某种程度上既是异常值,也是第一代学生可能做到的例子。
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引用次数: 0
More Than One Way to Be First 不止一种成为第一的方式
Pub Date : 2020-09-17 DOI: 10.1093/oso/9780190848156.003.0001
J. Benson, Elizabeth M. Lee
Chapter 1 introduces the reader to existing research on first-generation college students and argues that institutions need to learn more about the heterogeneity among first generation students to better serve this population. The authors describe their three broad questions: First, what are the different ways that first-generation students organize their social, extracurricular, and academic lives at selective and highly selective colleges? Second, how do first generation students sort themselves and get sorted into these different types of campus lives? Third, how do these different patterns of campus engagement prepare first-generation students for their post-college lives? The authors then provide an overview of their arguments and explain how their concept of campus geographies provides a new and useful lens. Finally, they describe their methods and provide an overview of the chapters in the book.
第1章向读者介绍了关于第一代大学生的现有研究,并认为机构需要更多地了解第一代大学生的异质性,以更好地为这一群体服务。作者描述了他们的三个主要问题:首先,第一代学生在名牌大学和高名牌大学组织社交、课外活动和学术生活的方式有什么不同?第二,第一代学生是如何将自己归类到这些不同类型的校园生活中的?第三,这些不同的校园参与模式如何让第一代学生为毕业后的生活做好准备?然后,作者概述了他们的论点,并解释了他们的校园地理概念如何提供了一个新的有用的视角。最后,他们描述了他们的方法,并提供了书中章节的概述。
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引用次数: 0
期刊
Geographies of Campus Inequality
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