In Pursuit of the Ed.D.: A Study of East Tennessee State University's Doctors of Education: Who They are and Why They Persisted.

According to Kerlin (1995a), first-generation students are not expected to survive to doctorate degree attainment because of vulnerability to negative affects associated with their status; yet persist they do at East Tennessee State University. The desire to study the first-generation East Tennessee...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Banks, Mata J.
Format: Others
Published: Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dc.etsu.edu/etd/2167
https://dc.etsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3531&context=etd
id ndltd-ETSU-oai-dc.etsu.edu-etd-3531
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-ETSU-oai-dc.etsu.edu-etd-35312019-05-16T04:47:58Z In Pursuit of the Ed.D.: A Study of East Tennessee State University's Doctors of Education: Who They are and Why They Persisted. Banks, Mata J. According to Kerlin (1995a), first-generation students are not expected to survive to doctorate degree attainment because of vulnerability to negative affects associated with their status; yet persist they do at East Tennessee State University. The desire to study the first-generation East Tennessee State University's Doctors of Education and the limited number of first-generation graduate studies available, especially in the academic field of education, promoted developing this study. It was the intent of this study to offer additional empirical research toward understanding variables associated with first-generation persistence as encountered by East Tennessee State University's Doctors of education. Quantitative analysis derived through survey research served as an explanatory framework to investigate major variables of first-generation persistence. The survey targeted East Tennessee State University's Doctors of Education who received degrees prior to June 2004. Investigation of empirical evidence revealed that unlike previous first-generation studies (Hayes, 1997; Hurley, 2002; Inman and Mayes, 1999; Khanh, 2002; NCES, 1998; Terenzini, Springer, Yaeger, Pascarella, and Nora, 1996) the bulk (73.7%) of East Tennessee State University Doctors of Education were first-generation. Moreover, although previous studies suggested the presence of unique barriers attributed to first-generation status, no significant differences resulted in either identification or ranking of barriers or facilitators to degree attainment between first-generation East Tennessee State University's Doctors of Education and their non-first-generation counterparts. The Survey of ETSU Doctors of Education requested respondents prioritize identified barriers and facilitators. After plotting significant bivariate coordinate pairs among ranked barriers and facilitators, flat line (zero sloped) clusters depicted the presence of six weak monotone associations among variables. Facilitator rankings were associated with a respondent's age, parental college attendance, and education specialist degree, while barrier rankings were associated with a respondent's marital status at the time of degree attainment, secondary support source, and post doctorate employment. 2006-12-16T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://dc.etsu.edu/etd/2167 https://dc.etsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3531&context=etd Copyright by the authors. Electronic Theses and Dissertations Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University Appalachian East Tennessee State University Education Doctorate First-generation Post-baccalaureate Persistence Educational Sociology Social and Behavioral Sciences Sociology
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Appalachian
East Tennessee State University
Education Doctorate
First-generation
Post-baccalaureate
Persistence
Educational Sociology
Social and Behavioral Sciences
Sociology
spellingShingle Appalachian
East Tennessee State University
Education Doctorate
First-generation
Post-baccalaureate
Persistence
Educational Sociology
Social and Behavioral Sciences
Sociology
Banks, Mata J.
In Pursuit of the Ed.D.: A Study of East Tennessee State University's Doctors of Education: Who They are and Why They Persisted.
description According to Kerlin (1995a), first-generation students are not expected to survive to doctorate degree attainment because of vulnerability to negative affects associated with their status; yet persist they do at East Tennessee State University. The desire to study the first-generation East Tennessee State University's Doctors of Education and the limited number of first-generation graduate studies available, especially in the academic field of education, promoted developing this study. It was the intent of this study to offer additional empirical research toward understanding variables associated with first-generation persistence as encountered by East Tennessee State University's Doctors of education. Quantitative analysis derived through survey research served as an explanatory framework to investigate major variables of first-generation persistence. The survey targeted East Tennessee State University's Doctors of Education who received degrees prior to June 2004. Investigation of empirical evidence revealed that unlike previous first-generation studies (Hayes, 1997; Hurley, 2002; Inman and Mayes, 1999; Khanh, 2002; NCES, 1998; Terenzini, Springer, Yaeger, Pascarella, and Nora, 1996) the bulk (73.7%) of East Tennessee State University Doctors of Education were first-generation. Moreover, although previous studies suggested the presence of unique barriers attributed to first-generation status, no significant differences resulted in either identification or ranking of barriers or facilitators to degree attainment between first-generation East Tennessee State University's Doctors of Education and their non-first-generation counterparts. The Survey of ETSU Doctors of Education requested respondents prioritize identified barriers and facilitators. After plotting significant bivariate coordinate pairs among ranked barriers and facilitators, flat line (zero sloped) clusters depicted the presence of six weak monotone associations among variables. Facilitator rankings were associated with a respondent's age, parental college attendance, and education specialist degree, while barrier rankings were associated with a respondent's marital status at the time of degree attainment, secondary support source, and post doctorate employment.
author Banks, Mata J.
author_facet Banks, Mata J.
author_sort Banks, Mata J.
title In Pursuit of the Ed.D.: A Study of East Tennessee State University's Doctors of Education: Who They are and Why They Persisted.
title_short In Pursuit of the Ed.D.: A Study of East Tennessee State University's Doctors of Education: Who They are and Why They Persisted.
title_full In Pursuit of the Ed.D.: A Study of East Tennessee State University's Doctors of Education: Who They are and Why They Persisted.
title_fullStr In Pursuit of the Ed.D.: A Study of East Tennessee State University's Doctors of Education: Who They are and Why They Persisted.
title_full_unstemmed In Pursuit of the Ed.D.: A Study of East Tennessee State University's Doctors of Education: Who They are and Why They Persisted.
title_sort in pursuit of the ed.d.: a study of east tennessee state university's doctors of education: who they are and why they persisted.
publisher Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University
publishDate 2006
url https://dc.etsu.edu/etd/2167
https://dc.etsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3531&context=etd
work_keys_str_mv AT banksmataj inpursuitoftheeddastudyofeasttennesseestateuniversitysdoctorsofeducationwhotheyareandwhytheypersisted
_version_ 1719188201708453888