Education

GUIDING URBAN YOUTH ACROSS THE HIGH SCHOOL/ COLLEGE DIVIDE: INSIGHTS FROM A COMMUNITY-ENGAGED RESEARCH PROJECT

Document Type

Book Chapter

Abstract

Authored by a university-based researcher and practitioners in an urban high school, the chapter highlights youths’ perspectives on academic support systems in an Early College program through Sen’s concepts of freedom and unfreedom and Nussbaum’s capabilities approach. Data from student questionnaires and focus group conversations suggest that students’ choices on whether or not to utilize academic supports are influenced by external and internal unfreedoms. Their internal unfreedoms were: (a) their sense of belonging/not belonging in a college-environment; (b) fear of judgment; (c) social anxiety; (d) cultural scripts for what it means to ask for help and who asks for help; and e) a lack of meaningful connections with college-based people and places. The chapter grapples with the divide between high school and college; and between equity-centric programs and what students actually need to have the freedom to achieve in such programs. Copyright © 2026 by Emerald Publishing Limited All rights of reproduction in any form reserved.

Publication Title

Learning in a Time of Division: School-University-Community Research in Education

Publication Date

2026

First Page

7

Last Page

31

ISBN

9781805924593

DOI

10.1108/978-1-80592-459-320251019

Keywords

Academic support services, capabilities approach, community-engaged research; early college, student identity, university-school partnerships, urban youth

Share

COinS