努力工作和用心工作:第一代未被记录/被修改的大学生、文化资本和传递

Stephen Santa-Ramirez
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引用次数: 7

摘要

摘要:这本批判性的民族志突出了美国西南部一所历史悠久的白人公立大学的第一代拉丁裔无证/无证大学生是如何为其他法律地位有限的学生建立奖学金和同伴指导计划的。指导本研究的理论联系是社会资本和导航资本,并试图回答这些大学生如何利用这些形式的文化财富为他们的同龄人开发不同的校园支持服务。本研究的发现揭示了这些组织成员如何利用他们的文化资本组织和与各种利益相关者建立联系,为无证/无证学生制定奖学金,以及申请和获得资助,以启动同伴指导计划。本研究强调了这些第一代大学生为大学带来的代理行为和资产,并为机构代理提供建议,以更好地支持他们。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Hard Work and Heart Work: First-Generation Undocu/DACAmented Collegians, Cultural Capital, and Paying-it-Forward
ABSTRACT This critical ethnography highlights how first-generation Latinx undocu/DACAmented collegians who are members of a social and advocacy student organization at a public, historically white institution in the Southwest, U.S.A develop a scholarship and peer-mentoring program for other students with liminal legal statuses. The theoretical connections that guide this study are social and navigational capital and seek to answer how these collegians use these forms of cultural wealth to develop different campus support services for their peers. The findings from this study reveal how these organizational members use their cultural capital to organize and network with various stakeholders to develop a scholarship for undocu/DACAmented students, in addition to applying for and obtaining grant funding to commence a peer-mentoring program. This study highlights the agency exercised and assets these first-generation collegians bring to college and offer institutional agents recommendations to support them better.
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