MINORITY COMMUNITY COLLEGE STUDENTS WHO TRANSFER TO FOUR‐YEAR COLLEGES: A STUDY OF A MATCHED SAMPLE OF B.A. RECIPIENTS AND NON‐RECIPIENTS
- 1 January 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Community Junior College Research Quarterly of Research and Practice
- Vol. 13 (3-4) , 191-219
- https://doi.org/10.1080/0361697890130306
Abstract
In order to study the factors promoting and inhibiting transfer and the attainment of the bachelors degree, we conducted telephone interviews with 48 minority students who had received Ford Foundation Upper Division Scholarships between 1971 and 1975 and who had transferred from a two‐year to a four‐year college. Each of the 24 pairs consisted of one bachelors degree recipient and one non‐recipient who were matched according to the following criteria: gender, race/ethnicity, age, parents education and occupation and initial community college major. In high school, the bachelors degree recipients had stronger academic backgrounds than the non‐recipients. In community colleges, the bachelors degree recipients were more likely to see their instructors and counselors as “helpful” and to be members of a campus organization than non‐recipients. In four‐year colleges, the bachelors degree recipients were less likely to have lost credits when they transferred and more likely to belong to student organizations and to see their classmates as “helpful” than non‐recipients. We relate these findings to previous research on the importance of social integration into college life.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Effects of Community Colleges: Aid or Hindrance to Socioeconomic Attainment?Sociology of Education, 1987
- Long-term persistence of two-year college studentsResearch in Higher Education, 1986
- The community college eliteNew Directions for Community Colleges, 1980