Support from extended family in higher education: a narrative literature review
Support from extended family in higher education: a narrative literature review
Although the support provided by extended family members to university students has recently been more investigated, it is rarely considered as an element worthy of analysis in its own right. Situated in an international context, this literature review provides a map of research on the support of extended family members to university students and links research to university practitioners and policy makers as a way to promote diversity. The argument is that by facilitating students’ support networks, more effective diversity policies can be implemented at the institutional level. Employing the concepts of extended family, funds of knowledge and social support, the review identifies social support that achieves positive outcomes and support which outcomes are less effective. Selected articles (22) were classified, synthesised and analysed by the author. The paper discusses the role of extended families in relation to four sub-groups of students: traditional; non-traditional; international and dropout. The review shows that: a) social support is a cultural-based practice; b) research emphasises positive effects of social support; c) research tends to focus on ethnic minorities, and d) there is an unclear separation between parental and the support provided by extended family members. The paper concludes with a discussion of the implications for further research and practice.
Azaola, Marta
9ac43b18-a969-4877-a1b8-62bb4541da82
Azaola, Marta
9ac43b18-a969-4877-a1b8-62bb4541da82
Azaola, Marta
(2019)
Support from extended family in higher education: a narrative literature review.
Journal of Further and Higher Education.
(doi:10.1080/0309877X.2019.1648775).
Abstract
Although the support provided by extended family members to university students has recently been more investigated, it is rarely considered as an element worthy of analysis in its own right. Situated in an international context, this literature review provides a map of research on the support of extended family members to university students and links research to university practitioners and policy makers as a way to promote diversity. The argument is that by facilitating students’ support networks, more effective diversity policies can be implemented at the institutional level. Employing the concepts of extended family, funds of knowledge and social support, the review identifies social support that achieves positive outcomes and support which outcomes are less effective. Selected articles (22) were classified, synthesised and analysed by the author. The paper discusses the role of extended families in relation to four sub-groups of students: traditional; non-traditional; international and dropout. The review shows that: a) social support is a cultural-based practice; b) research emphasises positive effects of social support; c) research tends to focus on ethnic minorities, and d) there is an unclear separation between parental and the support provided by extended family members. The paper concludes with a discussion of the implications for further research and practice.
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Accepted/In Press date: 22 August 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 27 August 2019
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Local EPrints ID: 433765
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/433765
ISSN: 0309-877X
PURE UUID: 483bf859-79ce-441a-abb8-8e375ef637eb
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Date deposited: 03 Sep 2019 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 08:10
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