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Title page for ETD etd-04222009-144822


Type of Document Dissertation
Author Russell, Tiffany Simpkins
Author's Email Address tiffany.s.russell@gmail.com
URN etd-04222009-144822
Title “SURVIVAL IS NOT AN ACADEMIC SKILL”: EXPLORING HOW AFRICAN AMERICAN FEMALE GRADUATES OF A PRIVATE BOARDING SCHOOL CRAFT AN IDENTITY
Degree Ph.D.
Department Educational Policy Studies
Advisory Committee
Advisor Name Title
Joyce E. King, Ph.D Committee Chair
Hayward Richardson, Ed.D Committee Member
Janice Fournillier, Ph.D. Committee Member
Layli Phillips, Ph.D Committee Member
Susan Talburt, Ph.D. Committee Member
Keywords
  • African American women
  • womanism
  • identity
  • private school
Date of Defense 2009-03-16
Availability unrestricted
Abstract
ABSTRACT

“SURVIVAL IS NOT AN ACADEMIC SKILL”: EXPLORING HOW AFRICAN AMERICAN FEMALE GRADUATES OF A PRIVATE BOARDING SCHOOL CRAFT AN IDENTITY

by

Tiffany Simpkins Russell

This qualitative study explores the private boarding school experiences of eight African American female graduates, the forms of identity they crafted and the survival skills they developed while navigating this unique terrain. A life history methodology grounded in the womanist tradition was used to develop a portrait of the women’s experiences using their personal narratives as well as integrating my own. Data collection methods included archival research of historical documents related to the private school, Personal History Interview of the primary researcher, Individual Life History interviews of each of the women, and a Group Conversation with the participants. Narrative analysis (Labov, 1997) and Brown and Gilligan’s Listener’s Guide (1992) were used to analyze the women’s narratives and revealed a set of four significant “creative essences.” A “creative essence” is defined as “a proactive, unique, and individual path to inner fulfillment” (Davis, 1998, p. 493). These essences elucidate the survival skills the women employed at various times in their academic careers to cope with sexism, racism, marginalization and invisibility in an injurious environment. The emergent “creative essences” are: 1) Asserting Blackness; 2) Creating Safe Spaces; 3) Finding Voice and Embracing Loudness; 4) Relying on Sistafriends. These “creative essences” are explored in detail using examples from the female respondents’ narratives, the scholarship on African American women’s strength and resilience and African American literature. Implications for educational practice and future research endeavors are discussed.

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