Participation Type

Paper

Session Title

Session 8.02 Education

Presentation #1 Title

Rural Appalachian Poverty and barriers to 4 year Post-secondary education enrollment

Presentation #1 Abstract or Summary

Rural Appalachian students face ever growing barriers to post-secondary enrollment with little research to guide them. This presentation addresses some of those barriers and reinforces the need for more research in this area. "It's raining in the library, there's puddles in the halls. There's coal dust in my text books, and you could punch holes in these walls. But the state ain't got the money to fix up this old school, so I'm going to the next county and jump in their olympic pool." As the first verse in the song Ballad of Nathan DeRolph suggests, Appalachian schools are suffering and as a result so are the students who attend them. Although residents of Appalachia know this there is little research in the field to turn to for guidance. There is much research on the effect of poverty on education; however most of the existing literature focuses on urban poverty and primary school age children. There is much to be studied on the barriers that poverty creates to the enrollment of rural Appalachian high school students in four year post-secondary institutions. This paper is a literature review that demonstrates some of the barriers that students face and reinforces the need for new research in the area of post-secondary attainment for rural Appalachian Students.

At-A-Glance Bio- Presenter #1

As Assistant Director for Ohio University's College Adjustment Program and a Doctoral student in Curriculum and Instruction, Tiffany Arnold has been working with Rural Appalachian high school students and college access for the last twelve years. Additionally she was born and raised in rural Appalachian Ohio herself.

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Mar 28th, 4:00 PM Mar 28th, 5:15 PM

Rural Appalachian Poverty and barriers to 4 year Post-secondary education enrollment

Rural Appalachian students face ever growing barriers to post-secondary enrollment with little research to guide them. This presentation addresses some of those barriers and reinforces the need for more research in this area. "It's raining in the library, there's puddles in the halls. There's coal dust in my text books, and you could punch holes in these walls. But the state ain't got the money to fix up this old school, so I'm going to the next county and jump in their olympic pool." As the first verse in the song Ballad of Nathan DeRolph suggests, Appalachian schools are suffering and as a result so are the students who attend them. Although residents of Appalachia know this there is little research in the field to turn to for guidance. There is much research on the effect of poverty on education; however most of the existing literature focuses on urban poverty and primary school age children. There is much to be studied on the barriers that poverty creates to the enrollment of rural Appalachian high school students in four year post-secondary institutions. This paper is a literature review that demonstrates some of the barriers that students face and reinforces the need for new research in the area of post-secondary attainment for rural Appalachian Students.