A Multiplicity of Successes: Capabilities, Refuge, and Pathways in Contemporary Community Colleges

abstract: Community colleges, like all higher education institutions in the United States, have not been immune to the increased national focus on educational accountability and institutional effectiveness over the past three decades. Federal and non-governmental initiatives aimed at tracking and re...

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Other Authors: Topper, Amelia Marcetti (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.36033
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-360332018-06-22T03:06:43Z A Multiplicity of Successes: Capabilities, Refuge, and Pathways in Contemporary Community Colleges abstract: Community colleges, like all higher education institutions in the United States, have not been immune to the increased national focus on educational accountability and institutional effectiveness over the past three decades. Federal and non-governmental initiatives aimed at tracking and reporting on institutional outcomes have focused on utilitarian academic and economic measures of student success that homogenize the goals, aspirations, and challenges of the individuals who attend these unique open-access institutions. This dissertation, which is comprised of three submission-ready scholarly peer-reviewed articles, examined community college students’ conceptualizations and valuations of “student success.” The research project was designed as a multiple methods single-site case study, and the data sources consisted of a large-scale student e-survey, follow-up semi-structured interviews with a heterogeneous group of students, semi-structured interviews with faculty and administrators, and a review of institutional documents. The interviews also incorporated two experimental visual elicitation techniques and a participatory ranking exercise. Article One introduces and operationalizes the author’s primary conceptual perspective, the capabilities approach, to develop a more comprehensive framework for understanding and evaluating community college student outcomes. This article documents the methodological process used to generate a theoretical and an empirical list of community college capabilities, which serve as the basis of future capabilities-based research on community college student success. Article Two draws on the student interview and student visual elicitation data to explore the capability category of “refuge” – a new, unexpected, and student-valued purpose of the community college as a safe escape from the complexities and demands of personal, home, and work life. In light of recent efforts to promote more structured and prescriptive college experiences to improve graduation rates, Article Three explores students’ perceptions of their pathways through the community college using the participant-generated and researcher-generated visual elicitation data. Findings indicate that students value the structure and the flexibility community colleges offer, as well as their own ability to be agents and architects of their educational experience. Taken together, these articles suggest that student success is less linear and more rhizomatic in structure than it is currently portrayed in the literature. Dissertation/Thesis Topper, Amelia Marcetti (Author) Powers, Jeanne M. (Advisor) de los Santos, Jr., Alfredo G. (Committee member) Fischman, Gustavo E. (Committee member) Schugurensky, Daniel (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Higher education Community college education Education policy capabilities approach case study community college student outcomes student success visual methods eng 408 pages Doctoral Dissertation Educational Leadership and Policy Studies 2015 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.36033 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2015
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Higher education
Community college education
Education policy
capabilities approach
case study
community college
student outcomes
student success
visual methods
spellingShingle Higher education
Community college education
Education policy
capabilities approach
case study
community college
student outcomes
student success
visual methods
A Multiplicity of Successes: Capabilities, Refuge, and Pathways in Contemporary Community Colleges
description abstract: Community colleges, like all higher education institutions in the United States, have not been immune to the increased national focus on educational accountability and institutional effectiveness over the past three decades. Federal and non-governmental initiatives aimed at tracking and reporting on institutional outcomes have focused on utilitarian academic and economic measures of student success that homogenize the goals, aspirations, and challenges of the individuals who attend these unique open-access institutions. This dissertation, which is comprised of three submission-ready scholarly peer-reviewed articles, examined community college students’ conceptualizations and valuations of “student success.” The research project was designed as a multiple methods single-site case study, and the data sources consisted of a large-scale student e-survey, follow-up semi-structured interviews with a heterogeneous group of students, semi-structured interviews with faculty and administrators, and a review of institutional documents. The interviews also incorporated two experimental visual elicitation techniques and a participatory ranking exercise. Article One introduces and operationalizes the author’s primary conceptual perspective, the capabilities approach, to develop a more comprehensive framework for understanding and evaluating community college student outcomes. This article documents the methodological process used to generate a theoretical and an empirical list of community college capabilities, which serve as the basis of future capabilities-based research on community college student success. Article Two draws on the student interview and student visual elicitation data to explore the capability category of “refuge” – a new, unexpected, and student-valued purpose of the community college as a safe escape from the complexities and demands of personal, home, and work life. In light of recent efforts to promote more structured and prescriptive college experiences to improve graduation rates, Article Three explores students’ perceptions of their pathways through the community college using the participant-generated and researcher-generated visual elicitation data. Findings indicate that students value the structure and the flexibility community colleges offer, as well as their own ability to be agents and architects of their educational experience. Taken together, these articles suggest that student success is less linear and more rhizomatic in structure than it is currently portrayed in the literature. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Educational Leadership and Policy Studies 2015
author2 Topper, Amelia Marcetti (Author)
author_facet Topper, Amelia Marcetti (Author)
title A Multiplicity of Successes: Capabilities, Refuge, and Pathways in Contemporary Community Colleges
title_short A Multiplicity of Successes: Capabilities, Refuge, and Pathways in Contemporary Community Colleges
title_full A Multiplicity of Successes: Capabilities, Refuge, and Pathways in Contemporary Community Colleges
title_fullStr A Multiplicity of Successes: Capabilities, Refuge, and Pathways in Contemporary Community Colleges
title_full_unstemmed A Multiplicity of Successes: Capabilities, Refuge, and Pathways in Contemporary Community Colleges
title_sort multiplicity of successes: capabilities, refuge, and pathways in contemporary community colleges
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.36033
_version_ 1718700937102491648