What students do early college high schools serve? Unpacking social constructions of the target population

To support the nation’s college completion goals, early college high school (ECHS) reform creates opportunities for interested students to earn up to two years of free college credit during high school. ECHSs also have an equity objective: to target and enroll students who are historically underrepr...

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Main Author: Julia C. Duncheon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Arizona State University 2020-11-01
Series:Education Policy Analysis Archives
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/4706
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spelling doaj-b7491dc3a9e4416ea0f101661e68ffd22021-02-23T00:48:21ZengArizona State UniversityEducation Policy Analysis Archives1068-23412020-11-0128010.14507/epaa.28.47062196What students do early college high schools serve? Unpacking social constructions of the target populationJulia C. Duncheon0University of WashingtonTo support the nation’s college completion goals, early college high school (ECHS) reform creates opportunities for interested students to earn up to two years of free college credit during high school. ECHSs also have an equity objective: to target and enroll students who are historically underrepresented and/or might not otherwise go to college. Yet the extent to which ECHSs actually serve their target population in practice is unclear, especially in a marketized school environment. Using qualitative methods and the theory of social construction and policy design (Schneider Ingram, 1993), this study explores the recruitment and selection practices at five ECHSs in the borderlands of Texas. Findings suggest that ECHS staff invited applications from the broad target groups. However, the admission process, shaped in part by patterns of self-selection, favored students who were academically inclined and relatively privileged compared to their district peers. ECHS staff socially constructed narrower ideals of the target population than those articulated in the policy design based on their assumptions about who was likely to succeed in—and thus deserving of—an early college opportunity. Findings are discussed with particular attention to the equity implications of ECHS reform.https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/4706early college high schoolsunderrepresented studentscollege accessequitysocial construction
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Julia C. Duncheon
spellingShingle Julia C. Duncheon
What students do early college high schools serve? Unpacking social constructions of the target population
Education Policy Analysis Archives
early college high schools
underrepresented students
college access
equity
social construction
author_facet Julia C. Duncheon
author_sort Julia C. Duncheon
title What students do early college high schools serve? Unpacking social constructions of the target population
title_short What students do early college high schools serve? Unpacking social constructions of the target population
title_full What students do early college high schools serve? Unpacking social constructions of the target population
title_fullStr What students do early college high schools serve? Unpacking social constructions of the target population
title_full_unstemmed What students do early college high schools serve? Unpacking social constructions of the target population
title_sort what students do early college high schools serve? unpacking social constructions of the target population
publisher Arizona State University
series Education Policy Analysis Archives
issn 1068-2341
publishDate 2020-11-01
description To support the nation’s college completion goals, early college high school (ECHS) reform creates opportunities for interested students to earn up to two years of free college credit during high school. ECHSs also have an equity objective: to target and enroll students who are historically underrepresented and/or might not otherwise go to college. Yet the extent to which ECHSs actually serve their target population in practice is unclear, especially in a marketized school environment. Using qualitative methods and the theory of social construction and policy design (Schneider Ingram, 1993), this study explores the recruitment and selection practices at five ECHSs in the borderlands of Texas. Findings suggest that ECHS staff invited applications from the broad target groups. However, the admission process, shaped in part by patterns of self-selection, favored students who were academically inclined and relatively privileged compared to their district peers. ECHS staff socially constructed narrower ideals of the target population than those articulated in the policy design based on their assumptions about who was likely to succeed in—and thus deserving of—an early college opportunity. Findings are discussed with particular attention to the equity implications of ECHS reform.
topic early college high schools
underrepresented students
college access
equity
social construction
url https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/4706
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