Unseen disadvantage: How American universities' focus on independence undermines the academic performance of first-generation college students.
Northwestern University · University of Arizona · +2 more institutions
Abstract
American universities increasingly admit first-generation college students whose parents do not have 4-year degrees. Once admitted, these students tend to struggle academically, compared with continuing-generation students--students who have at least 1 parent with a 4-year degree. We propose a cultural mismatch theory that identifies 1 important source of this social class achievement gap. Four studies test the hypothesis that first-generation students underperform because interdependent norms from their mostly working-class backgrounds constitute a mismatch with middle-class independent norms prevalent in universities. First, assessing university cultural norms, surveys of university administrators revealed…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 193.17
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 97
Authors
5Topics & keywords
- Interdependence
- Disadvantage
- Psychology
- Independence (probability theory)
- Social psychology
- Academic achievement
- Class (philosophy)
- Mathematics education