Counselors, Information, and High School College-Going Culture: Inequalities in the College Application Process

被引:50
|
作者
Robinson, Karen Jeong [1 ]
Roksa, Josipa [2 ]
机构
[1] CSU San Bernardino, Dept Sociol, SB 327,5500 Univ Pkwy, San Bernardino, CA 92407 USA
[2] Univ Virginia, Charlottesville, VA USA
关键词
Counselors; College application; College-going culture; Social and cultural capital; High school context; EDUCATIONAL ASPIRATIONS; PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT; UNITED-STATES; STUDENTS; OPPORTUNITY; EXPECTATIONS; ENROLLMENT; DESTINATIONS; NETWORKS; GUIDANCE;
D O I
10.1007/s11162-016-9406-2
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
While socioeconomic inequality in postsecondary outcomes is well documented, limited research explores the extent to which seeing a high school counselor can help to reduce inequality in college destinations. In particular, previous research rarely considers the high school context in which counselors and students interact as well as the other sources of social and cultural capital available to students. Using the Educational Longitudinal Study (ELS: 2002), we find that seeing a counselor plays a significant role in predicting application to college, and while this relationship is attenuated, it remains strong even net of other sources of information. Moreover, the relationship between seeing a high school counselor and whether and where students apply to college is largely similar across high school contexts, with some indication that high school counselors may be most relevant in schools with moderate college-going culture. Finally, presented analyses provide insights regarding the extent to which different factors contribute to socioeconomic inequality in the college application process.
引用
收藏
页码:845 / 868
页数:24
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Reproductive health awareness among college-going girls
    Kamalam, K. Jyothi
    Rajalakshmi, B.
    [J]. INDIAN JOURNAL OF SOCIAL WORK, 2005, 66 (04): : 414 - 430
  • [42] Immigration and its effect on the college-going outcomes of natives
    Neymotin, Florence
    [J]. ECONOMICS OF EDUCATION REVIEW, 2009, 28 (05) : 538 - 550
  • [43] SOCIAL-CLASS, ACHIEVEMENT, AND THE COLLEGE-GOING EXPERIENCE
    GOTTLIEB, D
    [J]. SCHOOL REVIEW, 1962, 70 (03): : 273 - 286
  • [44] College-going and Trajectories of Drinking from Adolescence into Adulthood
    Crosnoe, Robert
    Kendig, Sarah
    Benner, Aprile
    [J]. JOURNAL OF HEALTH AND SOCIAL BEHAVIOR, 2017, 58 (02) : 252 - 269
  • [45] The economics of education: An analysis of college-going behavior.
    Heller, DE
    [J]. ECONOMICS OF EDUCATION REVIEW, 2001, 20 (02) : 194 - 195
  • [46] Counseling and college matriculation: Does the availability of counseling affect college-going decisions among highly qualified first-generation college-bound high school graduates?
    Pham, Chung
    Keenan, Tracy
    [J]. JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECONOMICS AND BUSINESS RESEARCH, 2011, 1 (01): : 12 - 24
  • [47] Federal Policy Efforts to Simplify College-Going: An Intervention in Community College Enrollment and Borrowing
    Rosinger, Kelly Ochs
    [J]. ANNALS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY OF POLITICAL AND SOCIAL SCIENCE, 2017, 671 (01): : 114 - 131
  • [48] Socioeconomic Inequalities in Self-Perceived Oral Health Among College-Going Students in Karachi, Pakistan
    Rind, Ghulam Kubra Kubra
    Shah, Nadia
    Inam, Sumera
    [J]. INTERNET JOURNAL OF ALLIED HEALTH SCIENCES AND PRACTICE, 2022, 20 (03):
  • [49] Teachers' Social Networks, College-Going Practices, and the Diffusion of a School-Based Reform Initiative
    Broda, Michael
    Ekholm, Eric
    Schneider, Barbara
    Hutton, Amy C.
    [J]. SAGE OPEN, 2018, 8 (04):
  • [50] Building futures: Youth researchers and critical college-going literacies
    Caraballo, Limarys
    Filipiak, Danielle
    [J]. REVIEW OF EDUCATION PEDAGOGY AND CULTURAL STUDIES, 2020, 42 (05) : 427 - 450