Loading...
Understanding the Experiences of Immigrant Community College Students
Malone, Marc Patrick
Malone, Marc Patrick
Citations
Altmetric:
Abstract
Using validation theory as a conceptual framework this study sought to better understand the experiences of immigrant-origin students who were born outside of the United States (first-generation immigrant-origin students) attending a rural community college. Data on people who have immigrated to the United States show that immigrant-origin peoples make up an increasingly large portion of the total population of the country (American Immigration Council, 2020; Budiman, 2020). Data also show that these same people make up an increasingly large portion of the college-going population in the United States, and that these students are more likely to attend community colleges than other types of institutions (Suárez-Orozco et al, 2019c; Teranishi et al., 2011). Current research on immigrant-origin community college students has tended to focus on students attending large urban institutions, and yet immigrant populations generally are increasingly settling in rural areas like Garden City, Kansas (Stull & Ng, 2016). Using semi-structured interviews with eight first-generation immigrant-origin students, this study revealed how external regulations regarding residency status has cascading negative impacts on student life, limiting access to services and programming and amplifying existing minoritization. This study also found that validating experiences with key institutional agents were present, focused particularly around creating a sense of welcome. Validation, which situates students successfully within the academic context as valuable contributors and creators of knowledge was, however, less present. Based on extant literature demonstrating key institutional agents can play an important role in the validation of immigrant-origin students, activating student agency and leading to increased student success outcomes, the interplay between validation by key institutional agents and student agency and wellbeing were also explored. In this study, the lack of academic validation present leads to implications for practitioners and researchers seeking to support or understand agency of immigrant-origin students.
Description
Date
2021-01-01
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of Kansas
Collections
Archive Status
This item contains archived web content.
Files
Malone_ku_0099D_18100_DATA_1.pdf
Adobe PDF, 626.94 KB
- Embargoed until 2171-05-31
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Keywords
Higher education administration, Community college education, Multicultural education, community college, immigrant student, validation theory
