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Redefining parental involvement: Working class and low-income students' relationship to their parents during the first semester of college
by Wartman, Katherine Lynk, Ph.D., Boston College, 2009, 221 pages; AAT 3349520

Abstract (Summary)

"Parental involvement," a term long part of the K-12 lexicon is now included in the higher education vocabulary. Many college administrators today associate "parental involvement" with a certain pattern of behavior and describe the contemporary traditional-aged student-parent relationship with negative examples. Dubbed by the media as "helicopter parents," this sub-population of overly involved mothers and fathers has come to represent all parents of college students, even though these examples are largely socioeconomic class-based.

This qualitative phenomenological study considered the lived experience of the relationship between working class and low-income students and their parents during the first semester of college. All students in the sample were enrolled at four-year colleges and had attended an alternative high school where parental involvement was supported and encouraged. Students (n=6) participated in three open-ended, qualitative interviews and their parents (n=7) participated in two.

What constitutes "parental involvement" for working class and low-income students and parents in the context of higher education? This study found that the parents had positive, emotionally supportive relationships with their students. Students were autonomous and functionally independent, but emotionally interdependent with parents. Parents in the study did not have a direct connection to their child's college or university; students served as intermediaries in this parent-institution relationship. Therefore, this sample did not fit the current definition of parental involvement in higher education. As colleges and universities implement parent services as a reaction to the phenomenon of parental involvement, they need to consider alternative pathways for communicating with parents from lower socioeconomic groups, many of whom have not attended college.

Indexing (document details)

Advisor:Arnold, Karen D.
Committee members:Kenny, Maureen,  Martinez Aleman, Ana M.
School:Boston College
Department:Lynch School of Education
School Location:United States -- Massachusetts
Keyword(s):College students, First-year students, Parental involvement, Parents, Socioeconomic status, Working class, Low-income, Parent involvement
Source:DAI-A 70/02, Aug 2009
Source type:Dissertation
Subjects:Developmental psychology, Individual & family studies, Higher education
Publication Number: AAT 3349520
ISBN:9781109052879
Document URL:http://proquest.umi.com/pqdlink?did=1679195461&Fmt=7&clientI d=79356&RQT=309&VName=PQD
ProQuest document ID:1679195461


 

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