The Graduate School Pipeline and First-Generation/Working-Class Inequalities

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Abstract

Sociological research has long been interested in inequalities generated by and within educational institutions. Although relatively rich as a literature, less analytic focus has centered on educational mobility and inequality experiences within graduate training specifically. In this article, we draw on a combination of survey and open-ended qualitative data from approximately 450 graduate students in the discipline of sociology to analyze graduate school pipeline divergences for first-generation and working-class students and the implications for inequalities in tangible resources, advising and support, and a sense of isolation. Our results point to an important connection between private undergraduate institutional enrollment and higher-status graduate program attendance—a pattern that undercuts social-class mobility in graduate training and creates notable precarities in debt, advising, and sense of belonging for first-generation and working-class graduate students. We conclude by discussing the unequal pathways revealed and their implications for merit and mobility, graduate training, and opportunity within our and other disciplines.

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Hurst, A. L., Roscigno, V. J., Jack, A. A., McDermott, M., Warnock, D. M., Muñoz, J. A., … Vitullo, M. W. (2024). The Graduate School Pipeline and First-Generation/Working-Class Inequalities. Sociology of Education, 97(2), 148–173. https://doi.org/10.1177/00380407231215051

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