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Formational Turning Points in the Transition to College: Understanding How Communication Events Shape First-Generation Students' Pedagogical and Interpersonal Relationships With Their College Teachers
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2013
Year
Student TeachingEducational PsychologyTeacher-student RelationEducationEducational CommunicationCommunicationStudent EngagementTeacher EducationCollege PipelineFg StudentsPedagogyStudent SuccessFormational Turning PointsAdolescent LearningHigher EducationPerformance StudiesTeachingInterpersonal CommunicationInstructional CommunicationRich HooverSecondary EducationInterpersonal RelationshipsMiddle Level EducationProfessional DevelopmentTransition TheoryArtsTheir College TeachersStudent Affairs
AbstractIn the present study, I explored student–teacher interaction, student–teacher relationship formation and development, and the ways in which student–teacher interaction and relationships facilitated support and persistence for first-generation (FG) students during the transition to college. Using transition theory as a sensitizing framework, I took an interpretive communication-centered approach to identify the teacher messages that FG students perceived to be turning points in their pedagogical and interpersonal relationships with their teachers. Thirty participants identified 105 turning points that they received from college teachers during their transition to college. These turning points were organized into seven turning-point categories and three turning-point subcategories.Keywords: Turning PointsFirst-Generation StudentsStudent-Teacher RelationshipPersistenceTransition The author would like to thank Dawn O. Braithwaite, Rich Hoover, Jordan Soliz, and Bill Seiler for their counsel on the study.The author would like to thank Dawn O. Braithwaite, Rich Hoover, Jordan Soliz, and Bill Seiler for their counsel on the study.
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