Abstract The primary purpose of this study was to examine the extent that involvement promotes persistence towards graduation for Black males participating in New York State’s Arthur O. Eve Higher Education Opportunity Program (HEOP). The general question was, “Which factors, if any, promote graduation for Black males in the Higher Education Opportunity Program? To build an answer, a cross-sectional quantitative study was conducted to identify and examine the college experiences of HEOP students who were currently enrolled or had recently graduated from four independent higher education institutions in New York State. Participants in this study included 147 currently enrolled and recently graduated students from Hobart and William Smith Col...
Promising Black males are an understudied and underserved population in the field of higher educatio...
According to the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation (2012), college degree attainment among Afric...
ABSTRACT SWIMMING UPSTREAM: A STUDY OF BLACK MALES AND THE ACADEMIC PIPELINE Rhonda D. Wilkins P...
Abstract The primary purpose of this study was to examine the extent that involvement promotes persi...
Previous research trended towards a deficit-oriented approach to understanding and explaining Black ...
This study used Harper’s (2012) anti-deficit achievement approach to examine the perceptions of Blac...
Black males complete college at a lower rate than do all ethnic minority groups in the United States...
The purpose of this qualitative, hermeneutic, phenomenological study was to learn how college-educat...
Thesis (M.A., Education (Higher Education Leadership))--California State University, Sacramento, 201...
textThis study examined the differences in engagement among entering African American male students ...
The issue of minority achievement, as measured by graduation rate is a critical one, especially for ...
African American male retention and graduation rates in higher education are drastically lower than ...
Black men collectively have not achieved the same success in graduation or retention as their counte...
When compared to their peer counterparts, Black male students have a lower college attrition rate. U...
Black men suffer some of the most dismal completion rates in higher education due to the extremely h...
Promising Black males are an understudied and underserved population in the field of higher educatio...
According to the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation (2012), college degree attainment among Afric...
ABSTRACT SWIMMING UPSTREAM: A STUDY OF BLACK MALES AND THE ACADEMIC PIPELINE Rhonda D. Wilkins P...
Abstract The primary purpose of this study was to examine the extent that involvement promotes persi...
Previous research trended towards a deficit-oriented approach to understanding and explaining Black ...
This study used Harper’s (2012) anti-deficit achievement approach to examine the perceptions of Blac...
Black males complete college at a lower rate than do all ethnic minority groups in the United States...
The purpose of this qualitative, hermeneutic, phenomenological study was to learn how college-educat...
Thesis (M.A., Education (Higher Education Leadership))--California State University, Sacramento, 201...
textThis study examined the differences in engagement among entering African American male students ...
The issue of minority achievement, as measured by graduation rate is a critical one, especially for ...
African American male retention and graduation rates in higher education are drastically lower than ...
Black men collectively have not achieved the same success in graduation or retention as their counte...
When compared to their peer counterparts, Black male students have a lower college attrition rate. U...
Black men suffer some of the most dismal completion rates in higher education due to the extremely h...
Promising Black males are an understudied and underserved population in the field of higher educatio...
According to the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation (2012), college degree attainment among Afric...
ABSTRACT SWIMMING UPSTREAM: A STUDY OF BLACK MALES AND THE ACADEMIC PIPELINE Rhonda D. Wilkins P...