Woman. Friend. Daughter. Scholar. Armchair activist. Hell-raiser. Not particularly in that order.
I employ mixed methods to examine why students choose for-profit colleges, if for-profit credentials are socially construed as legitimate, and what these interactions means for social mobility and labor outcomes across and within national contexts.
I'm also very fond of Dolly Pardon, fancy coffee, juicing, brunch, and the Delta blues.
Tressie McMillan
Thursday, April 12, 2012
Saturday, January 14, 2012
Why I'm Here
Woman. Friend. Daughter. Scholar. Armchair activist. Hell-raiser. Not particularly in that order.
I employ mixed methods to examine why students choose for-profit colleges, if for-profit credentials are socially construed as legitimate, and what these interactions means for social mobility and labor outcomes across and within national contexts.
I'm also very fond of Dolly Pardon, fancy coffee, juicing, brunch, and the Delta blues.
I employ mixed methods to examine why students choose for-profit colleges, if for-profit credentials are socially construed as legitimate, and what these interactions means for social mobility and labor outcomes across and within national contexts.
I'm also very fond of Dolly Pardon, fancy coffee, juicing, brunch, and the Delta blues.
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