DISSERTATION
ABSTRACTS
Diana
Muniz
(1994)
Factors
that predict Hispanic persistence in a predominantly White
institution: A comparison with African American students.
Center
for the Study of Higher and Postsecondary Education, School
of Education, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
ABSTRACT:
The purpose of this study was to test an explanatory model
of Hispanic student persistence and determine if the factors
that predict persistence for Hispanic students are the same
for African Americans.
Specifically,
this study examined and contrasted the between-group factors
(African American and Hispanic) that predict persistence both
through quantitative and qualitative approaches. In addition,
this study examined and contrasted Hispanic within-group factors
to provide a more comprehensive understanding of Hispanic
subgroups.
The sample
for the study was drawn from a four-year longitudinal study
of first-year students who entered a large, research university
in the Fall of 1990. The sample for the quantitative study
consisted of 95 Hispanic and 186 African American students
who had answered a survey about their university experiences.
The qualitative study consisted of ten Hispanics and twenty
African American students who had left the University during
their first year and failed to enroll for the Fall 1991 semester.
Data was collected from these students through telephone interviews.
This study
compared students who did and did not return in the Fall of
1991 for their sophomore year. It revealed that there are
factors that predict persistence differently for Hispanic
and African American students.
The results
indicate that college grades and financial concerns are important
factors in persistence for Hispanic and African American students,
but they differ in other factors such as certainty of returning,
family interference, and social ease. For example, Hispanic
student persistence was affected by certainty of returning
and family interference. Furthermore, differences were found
between Hispanic subgroups on the predictors included in the
exploratory model such as, generational citizenship status
and language spoken at home.
The results
suggest that more complex factors than have been previously
studied might be important in determining factors that predict
persistence for students of color, such as Hispanic and African
American students, as well as for the different subgroups
of Hispanics.
|