Educated Out: How Rural Students Navigate Elite Colleges—And What It Costs Them
Autor Mara Casey Tiekenen Limba Engleză Paperback – 15 mai 2025
A former third-grade teacher in rural Tennessee, education researcher Mara Casey Tieken watched as her former students graduated high school. She was shocked at how few were heading to college—and none were going to elite four-year schools. These students were representative of a larger national phenomenon: In 2021, 31 percent of rural adults aged twenty-five and older held a postsecondary degree, compared to 45 percent of urban adults, and rural students are especially unlikely to pursue degrees from private, selective schools. Why, Tieken wondered? And what happens to the handful of rural students who do attend elite colleges, colleges that may feel worlds away from home?
Tieken addresses these questions in Educated Out—a study that shows how geography shapes rural, first-generation students’ access to college, their college experiences, and their postgraduation plans and opportunities. Tieken closely follows a group of nine students for their college years and beyond at an elite New England private school that she calls Hilltop. Interviews with these students reveal the critical moments in the students’ educational careers when their rural origins mattered most: when applying to college, she shows how students are hindered by limited college counseling resources. Once on campus, they learn that many of the school’s opportunities are not available to them: they cannot access spring break trips, job networks, or low-pay-but-important internships. These students discover that home and college are very different worlds with different academic, social, and political climates—and, over time, they start to question both. As they near graduation and navigate a job market in which the highest-paying and most prestigious opportunities are located in urban centers, they begin to feel the complicated burden of their schooling: they’ve been “educated out.” Their stories show the costs of college for rural students: If they do not pursue higher education, they lose the opportunity for social mobility; if they do, they face a more permanent departure. These costs are individual, but rural families and communities also suffer—they lose young people with talent and skills.
In addition to advocating for a higher education landscape that truly includes rural students, Tieken critiques a system that requires people to leave their rural homes in search of opportunities. Our current economy depends on inexpensive rural labor. Without meaningful change, some students will have to make the impossible decision to leave home—and far more will remain there, undereducated and overlooked.
Both engaging and accessible, Educated Out presents important and timely questions about rurality, identity, education, and inequality.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780226841359
ISBN-10: 0226841359
Pagini: 224
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:First Edition
Editura: University of Chicago Press
Colecția University of Chicago Press
ISBN-10: 0226841359
Pagini: 224
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:First Edition
Editura: University of Chicago Press
Colecția University of Chicago Press
Notă biografică
Mara Casey Tieken is associate professor of education at Bates College. She is the author of Why Rural Schools Matter.
Cuprins
Chapter 1: From a Distance
Chapter 2: Applying: College Hope
Chapter 3: Entering: Far from Home
Chapter 4: Persisting: Different Worlds
Chapter 5: Leaving: Nowhere to Go
Chapter 6: Educated Out
Chapter 7: To College and Back
Acknowledgments
Appendix
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Chapter 2: Applying: College Hope
Chapter 3: Entering: Far from Home
Chapter 4: Persisting: Different Worlds
Chapter 5: Leaving: Nowhere to Go
Chapter 6: Educated Out
Chapter 7: To College and Back
Acknowledgments
Appendix
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Recenzii
"Educated Out masterfully reframes the debate on college access, exposing the profound spatial inequities that deny rural students the opportunity to pursue higher education, while elevating the resilience and unique perspectives they bring to campus. Vividly illustrating the rural student experience, Tieken dismantles stereotypes that rural students and their families lack ambition or simply don’t value education, offering a bold and incisive call for a more equitable system that uplifts rural life without reinforcing cycles of injustice."
“Dr. Tieken tells a powerful story of the sacrifices rural students and their families make to pursue the American Dream. Educated Out reveals hidden truths about our education system and shows how much colleges can learn from rural students and the places they call home.”
"How do working class rural kids get into an elite college, make it through to graduation. Then do they move on to claim the rewards promised in the meritocracy? In this accessible, lucid and careful ethnography, we journey with Mara Tieken and nine rural youth through complex, often lonely, and ironically resistant identity work and relationship management they face in elite tertiary education. This book offers no easy meritocratic or boot-strap formulas. What it does offer are rich, situated accounts of the lived experience of young people moving between emotional, social, and physical geographies. It also offers inspiration and hope while illustrating, theoretically and empirically, the multiple place-based, social and cultural barriers, identity gymnastics, and the constellation of factors that must align in order for first generation rural youth to gain entry and thrive/survive in an institution not made for them. In the end, the question remains: 'was it worth it?' Tieken’s compelling answer to this question is perhaps the most important contribution of this fine book."
"Mara Tieken is one of our most important contemporary voices in the scholarship around rural education. Her new book, Educated Out, represents a must-read for anyone interested in spatial inequities and higher education access for rural youth. The questions and issues that Tieken explores here are all the more salient given America's growing cultural and political divisions that are both rural-urban in nature and place our educational system increasingly into the 'Culture War' crosshairs."