Editors' Notes 1
Kimberly A. Griffin, Samuel D. Museus
1. Mapping the Margins in Higher Education: On the Promise ofIntersectionality Frameworks in Research and Discourse 5
Samuel D. Museus, Kimberly A. Griffin
This chapter defines intersectionality and asserts theimportance of considering individuals' experiences as influenced bytheir multiple identities in higher education and institutionalresearch.
2. Application of Mixed-Methods Approaches to Higher Educationand Intersectional Analyses 15
Kimberly A. Griffin, Samuel D. Museus
Perceived methodological incompatibility, emergence ofparadigmatic pragmatism, and basic types of mixed-methods researchare presented in this chapter, along with a discussion of itsusefulness in conducting intersectional analysis.
3. Intersectionality in Context: A Mixed-Methods Approach toResearching the Faculty Experience 27
Meghan J. Pifer
This chapter discusses how social network analysis andinterviews can provide insight into how faculty identify like peersand form relationships with their colleagues.
4. Analyzing Gender Differences in Black Faculty MarginalizationThrough a Sequential Mixed-Methods Design 45
Kimberly A. Griffin, Jessica C. Bennett, Jessica Harris
Interviews and data from a national survey are used to explorehow race and gender intersect and influence faculty experienceswith marginalization in this chapter.
5. An Introductory Mixed-Methods Intersectionality Analysis ofCollege Access and Equity: An Examination of First-Generation AsianAmericans and Pacific Islanders 63
Samuel D. Museus
This chapter challenges the "model minority" myth, illustratinghow a sequential analysis of national data and interviews can beused to understand how race, ethnicity, and generational statusshape access to higher education.
6. Using a Sequential Exploratory Mixed-Method Design to ExamineRacial Hyperprivilege in Higher Education 77
Nolan L. Cabrera
The results of a study of the racial ideologies of white malestudents are explored in this chapter through a sequential analysisof qualitative and quantitative data, highlighting the connectionsbetween privileged identities and the perpetuation of systemicracism.
7. The Utility of Using Mixed-Methods and IntersectionalityApproaches in Conducting Research on Filipino American Students'Experiences with the Campus Climate and on Sense of Belonging93
Dina C. Maramba, Samuel D. Museus
Qualitative and quantitative data are used in this chapter toillustrate how mixed methods promote deeper understanding of genderdifferences in how male and female Filipino students perceive andexperience campus climate.
8. Identity, Intersectionality, and Mixed-Methods Approaches103
Casandra E. Harper
This chapter addresses the challenges of capturing identityamong mixed-race college students and reveals how mixed-methodsstrategies can illuminate change as well as the meaning associatedwith those changes.
Index 117