Giles High School Graduates at Virginia Tech: Investigating the Relationship between Appalachian Identity and the College Experience

The purpose of this study was to conduct a qualitative exploration of the relationship between Appalachian identity and the college experience among Giles High School graduates who attend Virginia Tech. The population for this study was Giles High School graduates who attend Virginia Tech. The sampl...

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Main Author: Stallings, Sara Woodruff
Other Authors: Sociology
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/64432
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-644322020-09-29T05:40:12Z Giles High School Graduates at Virginia Tech: Investigating the Relationship between Appalachian Identity and the College Experience Stallings, Sara Woodruff Sociology Hawdon, James E. Ovink, Sarah Satterwhite, Emily M. Appalachia College Experience Education Identity Change The purpose of this study was to conduct a qualitative exploration of the relationship between Appalachian identity and the college experience among Giles High School graduates who attend Virginia Tech. The population for this study was Giles High School graduates who attend Virginia Tech. The sample size included ten volunteers who graduated from Giles High School in Pearisburg, Virginia, and have attended Virginia Tech in the past three years. Data collection was obtained from the sample by conducting semi-structured interviews. Coding occurred in two phases using thematic coding. The first phase consisted of an initial coding to establish an understanding of the responses and develop codes to fit the responses for analysis. The second phase of coding consolidated, re-affirmed, compared, and contrasted categories created in the first phase using matrices. The results revealed that the interviewees did communicate an Appalachian identity. When describing Appalachia, the interviewees communicated both positive and negative perceptions of their hometown. Attending college did result in a change in their Appalachian identity. Common changes were in their willingness to accept people different from themselves, their perceptions of Giles County in comparison to more diverse and urban areas, and their appreciation for the natural beauty of Giles. Compared to previous research, I found that Giles High School students seem to have less of a disrupting experience when attending college; however, dominant cultural messages still influence the identity of Appalachian students. Further research should be conducted to confirm the results and analysis. Master of Science 2016-01-11T09:00:22Z 2016-01-11T09:00:22Z 2016-01-10 Thesis vt_gsexam:7036 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/64432 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Appalachia
College Experience
Education
Identity
Change
spellingShingle Appalachia
College Experience
Education
Identity
Change
Stallings, Sara Woodruff
Giles High School Graduates at Virginia Tech: Investigating the Relationship between Appalachian Identity and the College Experience
description The purpose of this study was to conduct a qualitative exploration of the relationship between Appalachian identity and the college experience among Giles High School graduates who attend Virginia Tech. The population for this study was Giles High School graduates who attend Virginia Tech. The sample size included ten volunteers who graduated from Giles High School in Pearisburg, Virginia, and have attended Virginia Tech in the past three years. Data collection was obtained from the sample by conducting semi-structured interviews. Coding occurred in two phases using thematic coding. The first phase consisted of an initial coding to establish an understanding of the responses and develop codes to fit the responses for analysis. The second phase of coding consolidated, re-affirmed, compared, and contrasted categories created in the first phase using matrices. The results revealed that the interviewees did communicate an Appalachian identity. When describing Appalachia, the interviewees communicated both positive and negative perceptions of their hometown. Attending college did result in a change in their Appalachian identity. Common changes were in their willingness to accept people different from themselves, their perceptions of Giles County in comparison to more diverse and urban areas, and their appreciation for the natural beauty of Giles. Compared to previous research, I found that Giles High School students seem to have less of a disrupting experience when attending college; however, dominant cultural messages still influence the identity of Appalachian students. Further research should be conducted to confirm the results and analysis. === Master of Science
author2 Sociology
author_facet Sociology
Stallings, Sara Woodruff
author Stallings, Sara Woodruff
author_sort Stallings, Sara Woodruff
title Giles High School Graduates at Virginia Tech: Investigating the Relationship between Appalachian Identity and the College Experience
title_short Giles High School Graduates at Virginia Tech: Investigating the Relationship between Appalachian Identity and the College Experience
title_full Giles High School Graduates at Virginia Tech: Investigating the Relationship between Appalachian Identity and the College Experience
title_fullStr Giles High School Graduates at Virginia Tech: Investigating the Relationship between Appalachian Identity and the College Experience
title_full_unstemmed Giles High School Graduates at Virginia Tech: Investigating the Relationship between Appalachian Identity and the College Experience
title_sort giles high school graduates at virginia tech: investigating the relationship between appalachian identity and the college experience
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/64432
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