ABSTRACT

Developing alternative student development frameworks and models, this groundbreaking book provides student affairs practitioners, as well as faculty, with illuminating perspectives and viable approaches for understanding the development of today’s diverse student populations, and for building the foundation for their academic success and self-authorship. With the increasing number of adult working students, minoritized, multiracial, LGTBQ, and first-generation students, this book offers readers vital insights into –and ways to interrogate– existing practice, and develop relevant responses to the needs of these populations.Building on and critiquing the past frameworks, and integrating the insights of contemporary scholarship on student development, the contributors collectively put forward a robust theoretical and methodological foundation for this work, using Critical Race Theory as their central frame. CRT allows chapter authors to situate race related encounters at the center of their proposed alternative framework or model, and deconstruct and challenge commonly held assumptions about diverse college student development. In the tradition of CRT, each author offers an alternative model or framework that can be applied to the diverse population upon which the chapter is framed, prompting readers to address such questions as:• Who are our college students?• What set of experiences do our students bring to the higher education context? • What role have their environments/contexts (i.e. home, p-12, community, family, peer groups, mentors) played in our student’s lives? • What impact have intervening variables (i.e. race, oppression, power) hadon their experiences?• What strategies do they use to overcome developmental obstacles?• How do they define success, and how they know they have achieved it ?By laying bare the experiences of these diverse college students that inform this volume’s “alternative” frameworks this book contests that notion that they constitute square pegs that must fit into the round holes of traditional frameworks.

part One|33 pages

The Need for Alternatives in College Student Development Theory

chapter 1|14 pages

Alternative College Student Development Frameworks

An Exploration Across Race, Gender, and Sexuality

chapter 2|17 pages

Modeling Alternative College Student Development Frameworks

Increasing Access and Inspiring College Success

part Two|36 pages

Alternative Frameworks and Models for African American College Student Populations

part Three|53 pages

Alternative Frameworks and Models for Asian American College Student Populations

chapter 5|24 pages

A Critical Perspective of Asian American Identity

Creating Contexts to Cultivate Asian Americanness

chapter 7|12 pages

Forced Migration and Forged Memories

Acts of Remembrance and Identity Development Among Southeast Asian American College Students

part Four|66 pages

Alternative Frameworks and Models for Latinx College Student Populations

chapter 8|16 pages

Finding Meaning in the Models and Frameworks for Latinx College Students

At the Intersection of Student Agency and Context

chapter 10|34 pages

¿Quién Eres?

Identity Development of Latinx Student-Athletes

part Five|47 pages

Alternative Frameworks and Models for Lgbtqia College Student Populations

chapter 12|17 pages

Racing the Rainbow

Applying Critical Race Theory to LGB(TQ2) Ethnic Minority College Students' Development

chapter 13|16 pages

Breaking Through Barriers

Examining the Stresses That Impact Transgender Students' Collegiate Transitions

part Six|81 pages

Alternative Frameworks and Models for BI- And Multiracial and Native American College Student Populations

part Seven|54 pages

Alternative Frameworks and Models for Nontraditional College Student Populations

chapter 17|26 pages

Dual Anchoring

Advancing a Framework for Nontraditional Doctoral Degree Student Success

chapter 18|21 pages

The Paradox of Community Colleges

Latino Men and the Educational Industrial Complex

chapter |4 pages

Conclusion

Future Direction and Concluding Thoughts