4.1 Article

Staying Focused on the Goal: Peer Bonding and Faculty Mentors Supporting Black Males' Persistence in College

Journal

JOURNAL OF BLACK STUDIES
Volume 48, Issue 3, Pages 305-326

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0021934717692520

Keywords

Black males; higher education; peer associations; mentoring; persistence

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This qualitative study investigated the collegiate experiences of 59 Black males at three different historically White institutions. Specifically, we explore how these students construct meaning from their collegiate experiences and their efforts for educational success. As Black males, they were confronted by a deficit perspective that often translated into lowered expectations of them across the college milieu-both academic and social-and posited them as outsiders on campus. In response, the students articulated two critical components of their college experience that positively shaped their persistence efforts: (a) peer-to-peer bonding and associations with other Black males and (b) mentoring from Black faculty members. Findings suggest that these social networks and micro-communities both enhance and support Black males' persistence in college.

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