Nurturing a College-Going Identity in Black Emerging Adults

IF 2.6 3区 心理学 Q1 FAMILY STUDIES
Kim M. Anderson, Alison C. Cares, Amie R. Newins, Alexander Lewis, Michael Nunes, Arin A. Copeland, Itunu Ilesanmi
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This qualitative study explored Black college students’ perceptions of developing their postsecondary motivation and aspirations via in-depth qualitative interviews ( N = 14). Use of the grounded theory method produced a three-stage developmental process for nurturing a college-going identity that aligned with the initial phases of the plant life growth cycle. The initial phase for participants occurred during their childhood, with parents planting seeds of college-going aspirations for their children. The second phase of cultivating the soil for postsecondary ambitions occurred during high school, where participants’ self-motivation was bolstered within their familial and educational environments. The third phase also occurred in high school with germinating seedlings that produced concrete college-going plans by delineating potential fields of study and completing college applications. Intervening conditions promoted optimal (i.e., resource access) or adverse (i.e., COVID-19 pandemic) growth environments. Implications include delineating pathways to postsecondary success for Black emerging adults.
培养黑人新成人的大学认同感
这项定性研究通过深入的定性访谈(14 人),探讨了黑人大学生对培养中学后学习动机和抱负的看法。运用基础理论方法,得出了培养上大学认同感的三阶段发展过程,与植物生命成长周期的初始阶段相一致。参与者的初始阶段发生在童年时期,父母为他们的孩子播下了上大学愿望的种子。第二阶段是在高中阶段为实现中学后的抱负培植土壤,在这一阶段,参与者的自我激励在家庭和教育环境中得到了加强。第三阶段也发生在高中阶段,幼苗开始发芽,通过确定潜在的学习领域和完成大学申请,制定具体的大学升学计划。干预条件促进了最佳(即资源获取)或不利(即 COVID-19 大流行)的成长环境。其影响包括为黑人新兴成人划定通往中学后成功的途径。
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来源期刊
Emerging Adulthood
Emerging Adulthood Multiple-
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
19.20%
发文量
87
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