The "Traditional" College Student: A Smaller and Smaller Minority and Its Implications for Diversity and Access Institutions

Author/s: 
Regina Deil-Amen
Year of publication: 
2011
Session topic: 
Careers of faculty, administrators, and students in broad-access schools

What happens when a norm of behavior becomes the exception numerically, yet the social construction of that norm remains prominent? When such a situation occurs, those who do not conform to that norm tend to be marginalized despite their existence as the collective majority. Conceptually, they become, in essence, a marginalized majority. This is exactly what has occurred for the majority of postsecondary students in the United States.

Our conceptions of the typical idealized college student are based on traditional notions and an imagined norm of someone who begins college immediately after high school, enrolls full-time, lives on campus, and is ready to begin college level classes. Yet, such an assumed norm does not reflect the diversity of today’s college students.

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