Latino Student Persistence Strategies in Transferring from Community College to Tier 1 Universities: A Phenomenological Analysis

This study is a departure from discussions on why community college students do not transfer in large numbers, but instead, provides an analysis of Latino students from community college who have successfully transferred to Tier 1 universities. The conceptual framework included student engagement th...

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Main Author: Linwood N. Harris*
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: RU Publications 2017-04-01
Series:European Journal of Educational Research
Subjects:
Online Access: http://eu-jer.com/http://www.eu-jer.com/EU-JER_6_2_113_Harris.pdf
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spelling doaj-358366573e714ae981942b152be2ef6d2020-11-25T02:59:29ZengRU PublicationsEuropean Journal of Educational Research 2165-87142165-87142017-04-016211312210.12973/eu-jer.6.2.11312027Latino Student Persistence Strategies in Transferring from Community College to Tier 1 Universities: A Phenomenological AnalysisLinwood N. Harris*0 Carnegie Mellon University This study is a departure from discussions on why community college students do not transfer in large numbers, but instead, provides an analysis of Latino students from community college who have successfully transferred to Tier 1 universities. The conceptual framework included student engagement theory (Kuh, 2003), the support for student autonomy (Koestner et al., 2015), and the importance of students studying to mastery (Sarwat & Irshad, 2012).  These theories were applied to the central research question, ‘What strategies do Latino students from a community college use to create a successful transition from community college to Tier 1 colleges and universities?’ The researcher generated six themes on how Latino students experienced successful transfer: institutional support, student transfer experiences, strategies to adapt, financial support, studying to mastery, and family support as major factors for academic success.   These findings would be significant to student development specialists in community colleges.  Further, such findings can be used to support Latino community college students as they sought transfer to four-year colleges and universities. http://eu-jer.com/http://www.eu-jer.com/EU-JER_6_2_113_Harris.pdf Latino student retention higher education transfer shock Tier 1 university
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Linwood N. Harris*
spellingShingle Linwood N. Harris*
Latino Student Persistence Strategies in Transferring from Community College to Tier 1 Universities: A Phenomenological Analysis
European Journal of Educational Research
Latino student retention
higher education
transfer shock
Tier 1 university
author_facet Linwood N. Harris*
author_sort Linwood N. Harris*
title Latino Student Persistence Strategies in Transferring from Community College to Tier 1 Universities: A Phenomenological Analysis
title_short Latino Student Persistence Strategies in Transferring from Community College to Tier 1 Universities: A Phenomenological Analysis
title_full Latino Student Persistence Strategies in Transferring from Community College to Tier 1 Universities: A Phenomenological Analysis
title_fullStr Latino Student Persistence Strategies in Transferring from Community College to Tier 1 Universities: A Phenomenological Analysis
title_full_unstemmed Latino Student Persistence Strategies in Transferring from Community College to Tier 1 Universities: A Phenomenological Analysis
title_sort latino student persistence strategies in transferring from community college to tier 1 universities: a phenomenological analysis
publisher RU Publications
series European Journal of Educational Research
issn 2165-8714
2165-8714
publishDate 2017-04-01
description This study is a departure from discussions on why community college students do not transfer in large numbers, but instead, provides an analysis of Latino students from community college who have successfully transferred to Tier 1 universities. The conceptual framework included student engagement theory (Kuh, 2003), the support for student autonomy (Koestner et al., 2015), and the importance of students studying to mastery (Sarwat & Irshad, 2012).  These theories were applied to the central research question, ‘What strategies do Latino students from a community college use to create a successful transition from community college to Tier 1 colleges and universities?’ The researcher generated six themes on how Latino students experienced successful transfer: institutional support, student transfer experiences, strategies to adapt, financial support, studying to mastery, and family support as major factors for academic success.   These findings would be significant to student development specialists in community colleges.  Further, such findings can be used to support Latino community college students as they sought transfer to four-year colleges and universities.
topic Latino student retention
higher education
transfer shock
Tier 1 university
url http://eu-jer.com/http://www.eu-jer.com/EU-JER_6_2_113_Harris.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT linwoodnharris latinostudentpersistencestrategiesintransferringfromcommunitycollegetotier1universitiesaphenomenologicalanalysis
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