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Okere, Erasmus Igbozurike – ProQuest LLC, 2017
Minority and dominant cultures present a power dynamic that could promote or impede academic achievement for Black immigrant students. Drawing upon bicultural socialization as a conceptual framework, this study explores the predictability of various factors on academic outcomes among foreign-born compared to US-born Black immigrant students. Using…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Blacks, College Freshmen, Cultural Influences
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Salahu-Din, Hakim – Educational Considerations, 1988
A survey of 157 freshmen at Kansas State University attempted to determine differences between Black students and White students in their perceptions of the campus environment in four areas: community, administration, awareness, PI scholarship. Although neither group was negative, Black students were less positive than their peers, particularly…
Descriptors: Blacks, College Environment, College Freshmen, Enrollment Trends
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Saddlemire, John R. – Journal of College Student Development, 1996
Examines racial attitudes at a predominantly white university. White undergraduate interviewees had little contact with or understanding of black undergraduates. Their thoughts and impressions of blacks were based on misinformation or a lack of information. Many felt whites should not be held culpable for presumed wrongs due to past…
Descriptors: Black Stereotypes, Blacks, College Environment, College Freshmen
Rodgers, R. Scott; Sedlacek, William E. – 1979
At the University of Maryland, College Park (UMCP), 352 white freshmen completed the Situational Attitude Scale (SAS) in a study of racial attitudes. The SAS (1972) was developed to minimize the degree of subject withdrawal from the measurement of racial attitudes and to eliminate the "social set" problem that keeps subjects' real…
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Blacks, College Environment, College Freshmen
Ironside, Ellen M. – 1979
Factors that influence voluntary withdrawal from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill are investigated. A survey based on a cohort of students admitted for the first time in fall 1977 was conducted with a response rate of approximately 50 percent. Major and minor reasons for not returning to the university are tabulated for males and…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Blacks, Cohort Analysis, College Environment