Abstract

Extant definitions of college success largely focus on macro-level academic outcomes including academic achievement, retention, and persistence, which are linked to a limited set of indicators achievable by students including high grade averages, extra-curricular involvement, and leadership that denote a successful college student. These normative ideas of college success sustain ideologies that dismiss the multiplicity of ways students experience success in college and most importantly, they define who can and cannot be characterized as a successful college student. Relatedly, the dominant narrative of college success frames historically underrepresented college students (e.g. first-generation, low-income, students of color) as deficient and as less likely to be successful, even though these students consistently have to overcome greater adversity during their college trajectories and consequently experience many victories that are not legitimized as a success. Therefore, the purpose of this manuscript is to propose a more inclusive definition of the term college success that accounts for the diverse realities of students historically underrepresented and reveals the direct connection between student success and institutional success. Authors draw evidence from two research studies to illustrate their proposed definition of college success and provide implications for research, practice, and policy.

Highlights

  • College success is a term commonly used among U.S higher education scholars, student affairs educators, and policymakers

  • The literature on topics related to college success is extensive (e.g., Engle & Tinto, 2008; Higher Learning Commission, 2018; Willingham, 1985; Xiong et al, 2016), there are only a few scholarly pieces that offer an explicit definition for college success

  • The dominant narrative of college success frames historically underrepresented college students as deficient and as less likely to succeed, even though these students consistently have to overcome greater adversity during their college trajectories (Allen, 1992; Baker, 2013) and experience many victories that are not legitimized as a success under extant understandings of college success

Read more

Summary

Introduction

College success is a term commonly used among U.S higher education scholars, student affairs educators, and policymakers. The dominant narrative of college success frames historically underrepresented college students (e.g., first-generation, low-income, students of color) as deficient and as less likely to succeed, even though these students consistently have to overcome greater adversity during their college trajectories (Allen, 1992; Baker, 2013) and experience many victories that are not legitimized as a success (securing food and housing, expanding educational opportunity, access to health care, etc.) under extant understandings of college success Though these needs have been recently highlighted in a call for institutions to offer support to students in these areas (Higher Learning Commission, 2018), these victories remain unaligned with prominent academic outcome measures and expectations for success and continue to be generally perceived as taken for granted amenities. These conceptualizations limit our ability to expand our understanding of college success beyond general theories for completion

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call