“It’s Gonna Open Up Doors”: Alumni Reflections of Doctoral Community College Leadership Programs

Author:

Nachman Brett Ranon1ORCID,Pryor Jonathan T.2,Miller Michael T.1

Affiliation:

1. University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, USA

2. California State University, Fresno, USA

Abstract

Objective/Research Question: For decades doctoral community college leadership programs have prepared students for the challenges and rewards in steering community college campuses, yet minimal scholarship has explored these programs’ efficacy in serving their students. This study explores community college leaders’ motivations in starting, learning experiences during, and takeaways following participation in doctoral community college leadership programs. Methods: This narrative inquiry study draws on action learning as the theoretical framework and entails interviews with 19 community college administrators who graduated from doctoral community college leadership programs. Results: Findings are threefold, each related to the distinct pieces associated with the research questions at hand. Students’ motivations for enrolling in programing stem from financial and geographic accessibility, institutional credibility, personal fulfillment, and desires to advance their careers. During their time in programs, students benefited from curriculum that prepared them for their dissertations, cohort-based approaches that afforded community, and applicable assignments and activities that directly related to their roles as community college practitioners. Following their doctorate, students reflected on the value of having this degree for propelling their careers and recommended opportunities for programmatic improvement. Conclusion/Contributions: These findings offer new perspective into what doctoral community college leadership programs accomplish in supporting students’ objectives and professional practices, and also unveil ideas toward programmatic adjustments.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Education

Reference49 articles.

1. Sueños De Los Flyover States: Narratives of Latino Males in the Great Plains

2. American Association for Community Colleges. (2020). Trends in community college enrollment and completion data. Author.

3. American Council on Education. (n.d.). Carnegie classification of institutions of higher education. https://carnegieclassifications.acenet.edu/

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