College students with learning disabilities in New York City: A mixed methods study of social class and success

Item

Title
College students with learning disabilities in New York City: A mixed methods study of social class and success
Identifier
d_2009_2013:bc8effd626c3:10939
identifier
11172
Creator
Thompson, Ashleigh,
Contributor
Jean Anyon
Date
2011
Language
English
Publisher
City University of New York.
Subject
Higher education | Education policy | Special education | Disability Studies | Learning Disabilities | Meritocracy | New York City | Political Economy
Abstract
This study explores ways in which socioeconomic status and disability shape the academic experience of New York City college students with learning disabilities. Despite laws and policies designed to provide them with accommodations, college students with disabilities do not attain higher education at rates equal to their nondisabled peers (NCES, 2000). This mixed methods study examines policies, practices and perceptions at four-year institutions in New York City, and explores how the socioeconomic class of students affects their experience in schools and indicators like attendance patterns, persistence and graduation.;Administrative data compiled and analyzed for a sample of baccalaureate-granting institutions in New York City (n=44) show that 43 percent of students city-wide qualify for and receive need-based federal grant aid. Colleges with lower percentages of Pell-usage (higher student body SES) have higher percentages of students with disabilities. Numbers of students with disabilities in New York City are largely underreported at about 3 percent, falling short of state and national averages. Survey data from Disability Services Officers at these institutions (n=21) and interviews with staff and students (n=19) provide supporting quantitative and qualitative data to demonstrate the ways colleges create environments that enable or hinder student success. Theoretical considerations of political economy and meritocracy interrogate the notion of how students are judged to be academically successful. Informed by these data and perspectives, recommendations for policy and practice focus on constructive ways to identify and support all students with disabilities in order to help them succeed in higher education and realize stronger economic futures.
Type
dissertation
Source
2009_2013.csv
degree
Ph.D.
Program
Urban Education