Exploring the College Choice and Sense of Belonging of Haitian Students at a Highly Selective HBCU

File
Publisher
Florida Atlantic University
Date Issued
2016
EDTF Date Created
2016
Description
The growing Haitian population in the United States is directly affecting all
institutions of higher education As institutions continue to diversify across the
country, HBCUs are also responding to this trend According to Ricard and
Brown (2008), HBCUs are changing in order to keep up with the growing demand
of institutional diversity, and they recognize that having a diversified student body
will make the institutions more competitive
Although their historic mission focuses on educating Black students, there
remains a gap in the literature on HBCUs on one of the largest Black groups in
the United States: the Haitian immigrant In the literature, the Haitian population
constitutes approximately 15% of the total US foreign-born population, and
15% of the total Black immigrant population in the US, behind Jamaicans at
18%, respectively Moreover, Haitians make up the fourth largest immigrant population from the Caribbean behind Cubans, Dominicans, and Jamaicans
(Anderson, 2015) However, these numbers do not include the hundreds of
thousands of Haitians who fled the Country after the devastating earthquake of
2010 nor the thousands of undocumented Haitian immigrants currently living in
the US
This qualitative phenomenological study sought to explore the college
choice process of ten Haitian students who chose to attend a highly selective
HBCU located in the Northeast region of the United States Moreover, this study
sought to explore how these ten Haitian students developed a sense of
belonging to the HBCU campus The primary methods for data collection
included semi-structured one-on-one interviews, a demographic questionnaire,
and artifact analysis Using the theoretical frameworks of Chapman’s (1981)
Model of College Choice and Sense of Belonging, this study discovered the
factors that influence Haitian students’ decision to attend a highly selective
HBCU centers around family Moreover, this study discovered that Haitian
students at a highly selective HBCU described their sense of belonging through
various forms of relationships
Note

Includes bibliography

Language
Type
Extent
188 p.
Identifier
FA00004751
Additional Information
Includes bibliography
Dissertation (PhD)--Florida Atlantic University, 2016
FAU Electronic Theses and Dissertations Collection
Date Backup
2016
Date Created Backup
2016
Date Text
2016
Date Created (EDTF)
2016
Date Issued (EDTF)
2016
Extension


FAU
FAU

IID
FA00004751
Person Preferred Name

Pierre-Louis, Paul-Arthur

author

Graduate College
Physical Description

application/pdf
188 p.
Title Plain
Exploring the College Choice and Sense of Belonging of Haitian Students at a Highly Selective HBCU
Use and Reproduction
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Origin Information

2016
2016
Florida Atlantic University

Boca Raton, Fla

Physical Location
Florida Atlantic University Libraries
Place

Boca Raton, Fla
Sub Location
Digital Library
Title
Exploring the College Choice and Sense of Belonging of Haitian Students at a Highly Selective HBCU
Other Title Info

Exploring the College Choice and Sense of Belonging of Haitian Students at a Highly Selective HBCU