African American Undergraduate Students' Experiences in Residential Learning Communities at a Predominantly White Institution
There is a nationwide decline in enrollment, retention and degree completion for African American students in predominantly White institutions (PWIs) in the United States. Colleges and Universities establish diversity initiatives to address these concerns, yet educational disparities persist. Instit...
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ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-261032020-09-26T05:32:14Z African American Undergraduate Students' Experiences in Residential Learning Communities at a Predominantly White Institution Best, Julia Y. Teaching and Learning Tlou, Josiah S. Dixon, Benjamin Nespor, Jan K. Burton, John K. Graham, Richard Terry retention residential learning communities African American students recruitment There is a nationwide decline in enrollment, retention and degree completion for African American students in predominantly White institutions (PWIs) in the United States. Colleges and Universities establish diversity initiatives to address these concerns, yet educational disparities persist. Institutions of higher learning also address ways to enhance the educational development of undergraduate students. One such initiative involves a paradigm shift to extend the curriculum into residential learning communities (RLCs). Therefore, this study addresses the following research question: How do African American undergraduate students in RLCs perceive the role of these communities, particularly the kinds of contacts they afford with faculty, staff, and peers, in shaping their educational development? I used qualitative methods - open-ended semi-structured interviews, participant observations, and a questionnaire - to explore students' experiences in six academically-tied residential learning communities. Thirty-two current and former members participated in individual interviews. Sixteen full-time male and sixteen female students include twenty-two freshmen, four sophomores, four juniors and two seniors. Consistent with Astin's (1985, 1993b, 1996) work, this dissertation suggests that student involvement with faculty, peers and academics is necessary for retention. However, this study argues that a critical race theory (CRT) perspective is needed to make sense of the way peer interactions create racial barriers and lead some students to develop what I charaterize as "racial-cope-ability" skills to deal with racial challenges. High school background plays a role in how students fare in RLCs. High school leadership experiences support positive self-efficacy and help students connect with faculty, peers and activities at the onset of the collegiate experience. A number of RLC components help create positive affective and cognitive developmental experiences: A sense of belonging and a sense of community significantly impact psychosocial wellbeing, success and retention; Built-in support systems, educational advantages for retention and personalized experiences at a large PWI are reasons to recommend RLCs to other students; and Residential learning communities at PWIs can contribute to existing outreach efforts into untapped in-state and out-of-state communities, school systems and outreach efforts on campus. Ph. D. 2014-03-14T20:07:07Z 2014-03-14T20:07:07Z 2006-01-24 2006-02-03 2007-03-23 2006-03-23 Dissertation etd-02032006-152449 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/26103 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-02032006-152449/ JBestDissertation.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech |
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retention residential learning communities African American students recruitment Best, Julia Y. African American Undergraduate Students' Experiences in Residential Learning Communities at a Predominantly White Institution |
description |
There is a nationwide decline in enrollment, retention and degree completion for African American students in predominantly White institutions (PWIs) in the United States. Colleges and Universities establish diversity initiatives to address these concerns, yet educational disparities persist. Institutions of higher learning also address ways to enhance the educational development of undergraduate students. One such initiative involves a paradigm shift to extend the curriculum into residential learning communities (RLCs). Therefore, this study addresses the following research question: How do African American undergraduate students in RLCs perceive the role of these communities, particularly the kinds of contacts they afford with faculty, staff, and peers, in shaping their educational development?
I used qualitative methods - open-ended semi-structured interviews, participant observations, and a questionnaire - to explore students' experiences in six academically-tied residential learning communities. Thirty-two current and former members participated in individual interviews. Sixteen full-time male and sixteen female students include twenty-two freshmen, four sophomores, four juniors and two seniors.
Consistent with Astin's (1985, 1993b, 1996) work, this dissertation suggests that student involvement with faculty, peers and academics is necessary for retention. However, this study argues that a critical race theory (CRT) perspective is needed to make sense of the way peer interactions create racial barriers and lead some students to develop what I charaterize as "racial-cope-ability" skills to deal with racial challenges.
High school background plays a role in how students fare in RLCs. High school leadership experiences support positive self-efficacy and help students connect with faculty, peers and activities at the onset of the collegiate experience.
A number of RLC components help create positive affective and cognitive developmental experiences:
A sense of belonging and a sense of community significantly impact psychosocial wellbeing, success and retention;
Built-in support systems, educational advantages for retention and personalized experiences at a large PWI are reasons to recommend RLCs to other students; and
Residential learning communities at PWIs can contribute to existing outreach efforts into untapped in-state and out-of-state communities, school systems and outreach efforts on campus. === Ph. D. |
author2 |
Teaching and Learning |
author_facet |
Teaching and Learning Best, Julia Y. |
author |
Best, Julia Y. |
author_sort |
Best, Julia Y. |
title |
African American Undergraduate Students' Experiences in Residential Learning Communities at a Predominantly White Institution |
title_short |
African American Undergraduate Students' Experiences in Residential Learning Communities at a Predominantly White Institution |
title_full |
African American Undergraduate Students' Experiences in Residential Learning Communities at a Predominantly White Institution |
title_fullStr |
African American Undergraduate Students' Experiences in Residential Learning Communities at a Predominantly White Institution |
title_full_unstemmed |
African American Undergraduate Students' Experiences in Residential Learning Communities at a Predominantly White Institution |
title_sort |
african american undergraduate students' experiences in residential learning communities at a predominantly white institution |
publisher |
Virginia Tech |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10919/26103 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-02032006-152449/ |
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