The Role of Relational Reciprocity: How Students’ Families Support and Influence Them during the Transition to Higher Education
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature
2.1. Role of Family for College Students
2.2. The Role of Chosen Family
2.3. Sustaining Interconnection in Independent Spaces
3. Methods
3.1. Research Site
3.2. Recruitment and Data Collection
3.3. Data Analysis
3.4. Trustworthiness
3.5. Researchers’ Positionality
4. Findings
4.1. Genuine Reciprocity through Action and Conversation
4.2. Emotional Reciprocity That Uplifts and Encourages Students
his family kind of provides that family support… I don’t really have any real family structure type thing. They have a little girl and she’s the cutest little thing ever. She’s like my little sister… I don’t know what it’s called, like the need for love or care or something? I’m not saying I’m not loved by my siblings or anything but my dad’s gone and my mom is like, not really a mom. They kind of provide that for me, that structure of a family
4.3. Temporal Reciprocity: Investing in Family Time and Mutual Support
… with him passing away, it’s like mom… kind of pushing it on you and then she’s kind of like “there’s a lot of stuff to do,” so we’re always with the taxes and stuff… and kind of just be there for her… ain’t nobody home really for her…
I’m very close with my family… that’s just the Mexican culture… I see my cousin [and her boyfriend]. She’s doing AVID with me, she’s an AVID tutor, so I kind of got her into that… I see them every Tuesday and Thursday, and it’s awesome.
I try to take her at least once or twice a month [to] do something fun and she asks me about college. One day I showed her around the college campus and kind of got those seeds planted in her like, this is something you could do one day. Talking about her school and her grades and things like that…
4.4. Financial Reciprocity: If We Can, We Will
She, [my sister] is the biggest reason why I’m back in school as well. She and my mom are the ones who are paying for it now… cause the loans that I’m getting doesn’t always cover the full amount of the tuition.
I send half of my paycheck home to my mom so she can do whatever she needs to do because she’s a single mom with my brother at home. She needs some help so that she can help me and help my brother and she’s the support system in my family anyway. I try and do as much as possible, especially when I’m home. I go clean up and stuff instead of just leaving everything everywhere like I used to do in high school because I hate cleaning; but I’ll help out now and walk my dog, do whatever I need to do.
My mom tries not to baby me, but I know she really wants to. I tell her like—don’t… I need to be broke. I need to know how it feels to be broke… I know it’d be nice to have that extra financial support, but I think I need to know how it is to struggle. To know what I need to do to succeed. Cause I think if you don’t have the mindset of understanding one side from the other, like being poor and being rich. If you just focus on being rich—you’ll never understand how it is for people with less money.
4.5. Resistant Reciprocity: Complicated Family Ties
It’s more like the lack of family support that impacts, because I’m gonna be graduating soon, and I went to study abroad and no one in my family cared except, “oh when you go here, get me this”. Bring back souvenirs pretty much. When I came back, my friends were there, and they had this big sign for me, and I was like “I wish my family would do that”.
… not only do I get mentorship, I get a job, so now you cover finances, that was a struggle. And so, it was right across the street, so my mom didn’t have an excuse of “oh I can’t get you there”. So, we would just walk across the street; they had computers, so I would write papers…
I think me and my dad had that unspoken connection… you’re growing up and you—starting to know what you need to do… but he wasn’t expecting me to do it, but he for sure was hoping that I would… I wasn’t doing it just for my dad… I had the feeling of responsibility that I needed to do these things… cause as I’d look at my community, I see that a lot of it is starting to slip away and my dad always told me— “don’t ever lose your culture” and I don’t wanna lose my culture, so I wanna be a part of it in some shape or form.
4.6. Student Financial Contributions to Family despite Limited Means
I had $2000 in my bank account when I came back and that is what I needed for last semester—then I ran into some difficulties—my mom needed money because she was going to get evicted from her home. My sister was there, so I had to give her money—so I was short in paying my college tuition.
It’s my mom, where she is trying to get things picked up from a year ago where my cousin had a visit and she just wrecked our finances. So, now I’m kind of a support system for my mother as well… I’m kind of flat broke right now because she needs the money from my account that I get from my job to support and pay bills.
4.7. Harnessing Family Challenges as Motivation
… My mom did talk about coming– “oh, you should go to college, you know, for your education and get a better job” because she’s in the cleaning industry where she cleans commercial buildings and my dad works in a factory and they were like you don’t wanna do this.
… none of my parents went to college… I see how much they have to work and how much they struggle to make money and keep money and like—not live. And they live paycheck to paycheck basically so I just wanna give myself a better opportunity to make some money.
5. Discussion
6. Implications
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Luedke, C.L.; Contreras-García, N.; Golden, C. The Role of Relational Reciprocity: How Students’ Families Support and Influence Them during the Transition to Higher Education. Educ. Sci. 2024, 14, 689. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci14070689
Luedke CL, Contreras-García N, Golden C. The Role of Relational Reciprocity: How Students’ Families Support and Influence Them during the Transition to Higher Education. Education Sciences. 2024; 14(7):689. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci14070689
Chicago/Turabian StyleLuedke, Courtney L., Nicole Contreras-García, and Cherish Golden. 2024. "The Role of Relational Reciprocity: How Students’ Families Support and Influence Them during the Transition to Higher Education" Education Sciences 14, no. 7: 689. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci14070689
APA StyleLuedke, C. L., Contreras-García, N., & Golden, C. (2024). The Role of Relational Reciprocity: How Students’ Families Support and Influence Them during the Transition to Higher Education. Education Sciences, 14(7), 689. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci14070689