精英大学的归属感和界限

IF 3 2区 社会学 Q1 SOCIOLOGY Social Problems Pub Date : 2022-09-10 DOI:10.1093/socpro/spac051
A. Jack, Zennon Black
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引用次数: 3

摘要

学者们认为,低收入本科生会经历“文化不匹配”,这会破坏他们的归属感,促使他们退出校园,并限制毕业后的流动性。通过对一所精英大学103名本科生的深入采访,我们研究了学生上大学的不同轨迹如何影响他们作为社区成员的认同,以及如何调节社会阶层和归属感之间的关系。虽然高收入本科生发现自己与大学同龄人之间的共性并融入社区,但低收入学生提供的账户则不同。双重弱势群体——就读于当地公立高中的低收入本科生——感到差异感增强,划定了道德界限,并退出了校园生活。或者,有特权的穷人——就读于寄宿、走读和预备高中的低收入本科生——采取了一种国际化的方法,专注于继续拓展视野,融入校园。通过详细描述低收入本科生中被忽视的多样性,我们的研究结果扩展了研究归属感的理论框架,包括塑造学生议程的边界工作,从而加深了我们对大学中不平等现象再现的理解。
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Belonging and Boundaries at an Elite University
Scholars posit that lower-income undergraduates experience “cultural mismatch,” which undermines their sense of belonging, promotes withdrawal from campus, and limits mobility upon graduation. Drawing on in-depth interviews with 103 undergraduates at an elite university, we examine how students’ diverse trajectories to college affect how they identify as members of the community and modulate the relationship between social class and sense of belonging. While upper-income undergraduates find commonalities between themselves and college peers and integrate into the community, lower-income students offer divergent accounts. The doubly disadvantaged—lower-income undergraduates who attended local, typically distressed public high schools—felt a heightened sense of difference, drew moral boundaries, and withdrew from campus life. Alternatively, the privileged poor—lower-income undergraduates who attended boarding, day, and preparatory high schools—adopted a cosmopolitan approach focused on continued expansion of horizons and integrated into campus. Through detailing this overlooked diversity among lower-income undergraduates, our findings expand theoretical frameworks for examining sense of belonging to include boundary work that shapes students’ agendas, thereby deepening our understanding of the reproduction of inequality in college.
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来源期刊
Social Problems
Social Problems SOCIOLOGY-
CiteScore
7.60
自引率
6.20%
发文量
56
期刊介绍: Social Problems brings to the fore influential sociological findings and theories that have the ability to help us both better understand--and better deal with--our complex social environment. Some of the areas covered by the journal include: •Conflict, Social Action, and Change •Crime and Juvenile Delinquency •Drinking and Drugs •Health, Health Policy, and Health Services •Mental Health •Poverty, Class, and Inequality •Racial and Ethnic Minorities •Sexual Behavior, Politics, and Communities •Youth, Aging, and the Life Course
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