1 University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
2 Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA.
Pers Soc Psychol Bull. 2019 Jul;45(7):1068-1083. doi: 10.1177/0146167218804548. Epub 2018 Nov 8.
A growing body of work suggests that teaching college students a contextual understanding of difference-that students' different experiences in college are the result of participating in different contexts before college-can improve the academic performance of first-generation students (i.e., students whose parents do not have 4-year college degrees). However, only one empirical study, using an in-person panel format, has demonstrated the benefits of this intervention approach. In the present research, we conduct two studies to test the effectiveness of a new difference-education intervention administered online to individual students. In both studies, first-year students read senior students' and recent graduates' stories about how they adjusted to college. In the difference-education condition, stories conveyed a contextual understanding of difference. We found that the online intervention effectively taught students a contextual understanding of difference and closed the social class achievement gap by increasing first-generation students' psychological empowerment and, thereby, end-of-second-year grades.
越来越多的研究表明,向大学生传授对差异的背景理解——即学生在大学之前的不同经历是参与不同背景的结果——可以提高第一代学生(即父母没有四年制大学学位的学生)的学业成绩。然而,只有一项实证研究采用了面对面小组的形式,证明了这种干预方法的好处。在本研究中,我们进行了两项研究来检验一种新的差异教育干预措施的有效性,该措施通过在线向个别学生实施。在两项研究中,一年级学生阅读高年级学生和最近毕业的学生关于他们如何适应大学生活的故事。在差异教育条件下,故事传达了对差异的背景理解。我们发现,在线干预有效地教会了学生对差异的背景理解,并通过增加第一代学生的心理赋权,从而提高了他们的二年级期末成绩,缩小了社会阶层成绩差距。