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Journal Article
The experience of Low-SES students in higher education: Psychological barriers to success and interventions to reduce social class inequality
Journal of Social Issues
Author(s)
The economic decline of the Great Recession has increased the need for a university
degree, which can enhance individuals’ prospects of obtaining employment in
a competitive, globalized market. Research in the social sciences has consistently
demonstrated that students with low socioeconomic status (SES) have fewer opportunities to succeed in university contexts compared to students with high SES.
The present article reviews the psychological barriers faced by low-SES students
in higher education compared to high-SES students. Accordingly, we first review
the psychological barriers faced by low-SES students in university contexts (in
terms of emotional experiences, identity management, self-perception, and motivation).
Second, we highlight the role that university contexts play in producing
and reproducing these psychological barriers, as well as the performance gap
observed between low- and high-SES students. Finally, we present three examples
of psychological interventions that can potentially increase both the academic
achievement and the quality of low-SES students’ experience and thus may be
considered as methods for change.
Date Published:
2017
Citations:
Jury, Mickael, Anique Smeding, Nicole Stephens, Jessica Nelson, Cristina Aelenei, Celine Darnon. 2017. The experience of Low-SES students in higher education: Psychological barriers to success and interventions to reduce social class inequality. Journal of Social Issues. (1)16-34.