Janella D. Benson, Paris D. Wicker, Imani Barnes, Rachelle Winkle-Wagner
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Community and Culture: Black Women's Recollections of Their Experiences in College Transition Programs
Abstract:
College transition programs offer early access to the collegiate experience, aid in the adjustment of students transitioning to college, and facilitate positive adjustments for Black women in their early college years. Less is known about whether Black women identify these programs as having a lasting influence on their college degree programs and careers. This critical oral history study of 24 Black alumnae contemplates their recollections of how college transition programs influenced their collegiate journeys within predominantly White and historically Black institutions. The Black alumnae emphasized the long-term importance of asset-based community cultural wealth approaches in transition programs that offered a head start to college. The alumnae noted that the transition programs provided forms of navigational, aspirational, and social capital. At PWIs, transition programs emphasized academic skills and social networks. At HBCUs, transition programs offered inclusion in the familial ethos of those campuses. In both institutional types, the women enjoyed gaining confidence and access to a hidden curriculum, which they retained throughout college and into their careers and lives.
期刊介绍:
Published six times per year for the American College Personnel Association.Founded in 1959, the Journal of College Student Development has been the leading source of research about college students and the field of student affairs for over four decades. JCSD is the largest empirical research journal in the field of student affairs and higher education, and is the official journal of the American College Personnel Association.