Making sense of single-parent student attainment of associate degrees

Single-parent students are a rapidly growing sector of the nontraditional student population attending postsecondary institutions. Retention of this population remains a struggle for institutions of higher education. The purpose of this Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis study was to explor...

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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2047/D20351617
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spelling ndltd-NEU--neu-m045rv39w2021-05-28T05:21:25ZMaking sense of single-parent student attainment of associate degreesSingle-parent students are a rapidly growing sector of the nontraditional student population attending postsecondary institutions. Retention of this population remains a struggle for institutions of higher education. The purpose of this Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis study was to explore the lived experiences of single-parent students within one semester of graduating with their associate's degree in order to provide a better understanding of why some single-parent students are able to persist to completion when so many others fail to reach the commencement stage. Five single-parent students were interviewed using a semi-structured approach. Findings focused on students' ability to maintain balance, feelings of belonging on campus, and motivation for persistence. Recommendations for practice and future research are presented.--Author's abstracthttp://hdl.handle.net/2047/D20351617
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description Single-parent students are a rapidly growing sector of the nontraditional student population attending postsecondary institutions. Retention of this population remains a struggle for institutions of higher education. The purpose of this Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis study was to explore the lived experiences of single-parent students within one semester of graduating with their associate's degree in order to provide a better understanding of why some single-parent students are able to persist to completion when so many others fail to reach the commencement stage. Five single-parent students were interviewed using a semi-structured approach. Findings focused on students' ability to maintain balance, feelings of belonging on campus, and motivation for persistence. Recommendations for practice and future research are presented.--Author's abstract
title Making sense of single-parent student attainment of associate degrees
spellingShingle Making sense of single-parent student attainment of associate degrees
title_short Making sense of single-parent student attainment of associate degrees
title_full Making sense of single-parent student attainment of associate degrees
title_fullStr Making sense of single-parent student attainment of associate degrees
title_full_unstemmed Making sense of single-parent student attainment of associate degrees
title_sort making sense of single-parent student attainment of associate degrees
publishDate
url http://hdl.handle.net/2047/D20351617
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