This article explores the dilemmas graduate education poses for women of working-class origin who come from different ethnic and racial backgrounds. It proceeds in a chronological narrative using examples from the authors\u27 personal experiences to make general points about how the intricate web of class, race, and gender relations shaped their experiences in higher education. Both women -- Cucidraz, a Chicana, and Pierce, a white woman -- struggle with the feelings of alienation and marginality as outsiders within the academy as well as their material needs for financial support. Their personal narratives reveal, as well, how race shapes their experiences in the academy. Racism renders Cuadraz\u27 class status visible, whereas whiteness ...
The role of higher education in the lives of individuals and the course of society is greater today ...
This dissertation is a qualitative study of how Black women undergraduates perceive and discuss thei...
This study focuses on Black diasporic women faculty’s framings of themselves and their experiences a...
This article explores the dilemmas graduate education poses for women of working-class origin who co...
In a society based on race, gender and class, Black working-class women are some of the most economi...
While it is clear that gender inequity still exists, this situation is compounded by race, ethnicity...
Undergirded by a theoretical framework, which focuses on the important role of social context, this ...
This essay examines Vargas’s (2002) and Stanley’s (2006) primary and secondary theses. I examine the...
As a teacher-scholar, this autoethnography is an account of my personal journey in higher education ...
Perhaps the least visible and understood experience in the academy is that of immigrant women of co...
Higher education research often defines success as retention and graduation, yet for many marginaliz...
This article explores the findings of a workshop designed to determine impediments for academic succ...
My research study reveals the racial, gender, and maternal experiences among nine first-generation C...
This research addressed three major questions regarding the perceptions and interpretations of the l...
This article presents the findings from a qualitative research project about a group of Black women ...
The role of higher education in the lives of individuals and the course of society is greater today ...
This dissertation is a qualitative study of how Black women undergraduates perceive and discuss thei...
This study focuses on Black diasporic women faculty’s framings of themselves and their experiences a...
This article explores the dilemmas graduate education poses for women of working-class origin who co...
In a society based on race, gender and class, Black working-class women are some of the most economi...
While it is clear that gender inequity still exists, this situation is compounded by race, ethnicity...
Undergirded by a theoretical framework, which focuses on the important role of social context, this ...
This essay examines Vargas’s (2002) and Stanley’s (2006) primary and secondary theses. I examine the...
As a teacher-scholar, this autoethnography is an account of my personal journey in higher education ...
Perhaps the least visible and understood experience in the academy is that of immigrant women of co...
Higher education research often defines success as retention and graduation, yet for many marginaliz...
This article explores the findings of a workshop designed to determine impediments for academic succ...
My research study reveals the racial, gender, and maternal experiences among nine first-generation C...
This research addressed three major questions regarding the perceptions and interpretations of the l...
This article presents the findings from a qualitative research project about a group of Black women ...
The role of higher education in the lives of individuals and the course of society is greater today ...
This dissertation is a qualitative study of how Black women undergraduates perceive and discuss thei...
This study focuses on Black diasporic women faculty’s framings of themselves and their experiences a...