To See or Not to See: Latinx (In)Visibility at a Newly Designated Hispanic-Serving Institution

Jonathan M. Cox, Ashley Stone, Angela Vergara, Shannon K. Carter, J. Scott Carter
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Abstract

More than two-thirds of Latinx undergraduate students in the U.S. obtain their college degrees from Hispanic-Serving Institutions (HSI), a designation based on the proportion of students who are of Latinx descent and low-income, instead of any federal guidelines for serving Latinx students. Existing literature identifies factors that aid students’ success at HSIs, but there is little knowledge about how Latinx students experience newly designated HSIs. This project centers the experiences of a sample of Latinx undergraduate students attending a newly designated HSI. Data consist of six focus group interviews with 23 students, focusing on participants’ decisions to attend the university and their experiences on campus. Data show students were attracted to the university with promotional materials portraying diversity and Latinx inclusion. However, they experienced the campus culture as promoting Latinx visibility in performative ways and among invisible workers, such as cleaning staff and groundskeepers. They found Latinx people and cultures to be largely invisible in the academic spaces of the university. Findings show how this mismatch between promotional materials and students’ experiences hinders their success and colors their experiences on campus.
看还是不看:新指定的西班牙裔服务机构的拉丁裔可见度
在美国,超过三分之二的拉美裔本科学生从拉美裔服务机构(HSI)获得大学学位,这是一个基于拉美裔和低收入学生比例的指定,而不是任何针对拉美裔学生的联邦指导方针。现有文献确定了帮助学生在hsi取得成功的因素,但关于拉丁裔学生如何体验新指定的hsi的知识很少。本项目以参加新指定的HSI的拉丁裔本科生的经历为中心。数据包括对23名学生的6次焦点小组访谈,重点关注参与者上大学的决定和他们的校园经历。数据显示,这所大学吸引学生的是描述多样性和拉丁裔包容的宣传材料。然而,他们体验到校园文化通过表演方式和隐形工人(如清洁人员和场地管理员)提高了拉丁裔的可见度。他们发现拉丁人和拉丁文化在大学的学术空间中基本上是不可见的。调查结果显示,宣传材料和学生经历之间的不匹配阻碍了他们的成功,并影响了他们的校园经历。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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