Coming to College Hungry
PDF (English)
HTML (English)

Palavras-chave

Student Development
First-Year Students
Food Security
Non-Cognitive Attributes
Performance and Persistence

Como Citar

Collier, D. A., Fitzpatrick, D., Brehm, C., & Archer, E. (2021). Coming to College Hungry: How Food Insecurity Relates to Amotivation, Stress, Engagement, and First-Semester Performance in a Four-Year University. Journal of Postsecondary Student Success, 1(1), 106–135. https://doi.org/10.33009/fsop_jpss124641

Resumo

This exploratory descriptive, single-university study (N=700) joined institutional, external, and survey data to examine first-year students’ food insecurity links to non-cognitive attributes and first-semester performance and persistence. Regressions indicate LGBTQ, multi-racial, international, transfer, and first-generation students exhibit increased food insecurity. Food insecurity linked with psychological distress, financial stress, amotivation, and intent to engage with peers but not to faculty, staff, and academic engagement. Food insecurity is also associated with lower first-semester GPA and credits earned. Findings strengthen limited evidence that food insecurity links to college students’ experience, suggesting groups of already-underserved students may need immediate support to ease food insecurity.

https://doi.org/10.33009/fsop_jpss124641
PDF (English)
HTML (English)
Creative Commons License
Este trabalho está licenciado sob uma licença Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Copyright (c) 2021 Daniel A Collier, Dan Fitzpatrick, Chelsea Brehm, Eric Archer

Downloads

Não há dados estatísticos.

Métricas

Carregando Métricas ...