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About this book
To improve community college success, we need to consider the lived realities of students.
Our nation's community colleges are facing a completion crisis. The college-going experience of too many students is interrupted, lengthening their time to completing a degreeāor worse, causing many to drop out altogether. In The Costs of Completion, Robin G. Isserles contextualizes this crisis by placing blame on the neoliberal policies that have shaped public community colleges over the past thirty years. The disinvestment of state funding, she explains, has created austerity conditions, leading to an overreliance on contingent labor, excessive investments in advisement technologies, and a push to performance outcomes like retention and graduation rates for measuring student and institutional success.
The prevailing theory at the root of the community college completion crisisāacademic momentumāsuggests that students need to build momentum in their first year by becoming academically integrated, thereby increasing their chances of graduating in a timely fashion. A host of what Isserles terms "innovative disruptions" have been implemented as a way to improve on community college completion, but because disruptions are primarily driven by degree attainment, Isserles argues that they place learning and developing as afterthoughts while ignoring the complex lives that define so many community college students.
Drawing on more than twenty years of teaching, advising, and researching largely first-generation community college students as well as an analysis of five years of student enrollment patterns, college experiences, and life narratives, Isserles takes pains to center students and their experiences. She proposes initiatives created in accordance with a care ethic, which strive to not only get students through collegeāquantifying credit accumulation and the likeābut also enable our most precarious students to flourish in a college environment. Ultimately, The Costs of Completion offers a deeper, more complex understanding of who community college students are, why and how they enroll, and what higher education institutions can do to better support them.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- 1. Neoliberalism Ascending: Persistence, Completion, and Student Success in the College for All Era
- 2. Metrics for Success: Austerity, Accountability, and the New Edu-philanthropists
- 3. Making Sense of the Data: Institutional Success as Degree Completion
- 4. Challenging Narrow Definitions of Success: What Is the Student Sensibility?
- 5. The Student Sensibility and Structural Exclusion: Itās Not about Grit
- 6. Early Interactions in Community College: The Marketing of Guided Pathways Meets the Student Sensibility
- 7. Addressing the Crisis: Creating the Community College as an Authentic Caring Institution
- Notes
- References
- Index