Darris R. Means’s research while affiliated with Clemson University and other places

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Publications (11)


An overview of the study process
A Model for Integrating Mixed Methods and PAR Methods. Note: Figure 3 depicts how an exploratory mixed method design and PAR can be used in tandem to curate strengths-based research and engage community collaboration. This figure is nested within an oval to emphasize the importance of examining power, addressing community narratives, and structural inequities as an ongoing, iterative task throughout the research process. The model reflects that the use of these approaches together requires attention to collaboration with and employing strengths-based models throughout the research process. Attention to these areas at the data collection, data analysis, and data interpretation phases of the research process can support the development of a data dissemination plan that is responsive to the needs of multiple stakeholders and potential benefactors. Further consideration for the impact of social justice change (direct and indirect effects) should be examined when specifying how and with whom findings will be shared
Schedule for Institute on Rural Black Youth and Postsecondary Education Access and Opportunity
A Mixed Methods, Critical, Participatory Approach for Studying Rural Black Youth’s Postsecondary Education Access and Opportunity
  • Article
  • Full-text available

August 2024

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20 Reads

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1 Citation

Innovative Higher Education

Darris R. Means

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Collette Chapman-Hilliard

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Donnie Lindsey

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[...]

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Destiny Mann

While researchers have used qualitative and quantitative methods to study postsecondary education access opportunity for rural Black youth, the use of critical mixed methods approaches to examine postsecondary education inequities for rural Black youth is unrealized. The purpose of this paper is to highlight lessons learned in using equity-centered, participatory approaches to study postsecondary education access and opportunity for rural Black youth and to develop a critical, asset-based scale to quantitatively investigate postsecondary education opportunity and access for rural Black youth. This study is informative for researchers seeking to develop critical, asset-based measures and instruments, and for educators and policymakers seeking to attend to place-based and racial educational inequities.

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Demographic survey results
Drawing on Internal Strengths and Creating Spaces for Growth: How Black Science Majors Navigate the Racial Climate at a Predominantly White Institution to Succeed

March 2022

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34 Reads

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20 Citations

CBE—Life Sciences Education

To support Black students in earning undergraduate science degrees, faculty need to understand the mechanisms that Black students use to succeed. Following an anti-deficit achievement approach, we used the community cultural wealth framework to investigate the strengths that Black undergraduates bring to their science majors. Community cultural wealth consists of capital or "knowledge, skills, abilities, and contacts" that students of color can use in their education. Through participatory action research, we studied academically successful Black science majors in the final year of their undergraduate degrees at a research-intensive predominantly white institution (PWI; n = 34). We collected data using a demographic survey and two semistructured interviews. Three themes emerged from content and thematic analysis. First, Black science majors use their capital to navigate the racial climate at a PWI. Second, Black students use internal strengths as capital to succeed in their science majors at a PWI. Third, Black science majors create virtual and physical spaces where they can share their capital and thrive at a PWI. We use our results to offer suggestions for researchers and instructors who want to take action to support the success of Black science majors.





Black Women, White Coats: Black Women Undergraduate Students' Persistence to Pursue Healthcare Careers

January 2022

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6 Reads

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1 Citation

Journal of Women and Minorities in Science and Engineering

In this qualitative, participatory action research study, we examine how six Black women undergraduate students develop, cultivate, and sustain their healthcare career aspirations while examining challenges Black women undergraduate students experience during their pursuit of a healthcare career. Using community cultural wealth to frame our study, we collected two interviews per participant along with participant-generated photographs. We found that student participants experienced multiple forms of oppression, financial challenges, and lack of access to academic resources, but they were able to persist through support from family, faculty, and peers, along with faith-based practices and creative arts. Findings provide insights for higher education leaders, STEM and health sciences faculty, and the healthcare industry to advance equity for Black women pursuing healthcare careers.


We Have Something to Say: Youth Participatory Action Research as a Promising Practice to Address Problems of Practice in Rural Schools

January 2021

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33 Reads

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8 Citations

The Rural Educator

The purpose of this article is to highlight a critical approach for practice, youth participatory action research, that can be used to invite rural youth to collaborate with school administrators, educators, and community leaders to identify and examine challenges, while building upon the strengths of a school and community to address challenges. Our youth participatory action research project was a collaboration between adult researchers and five students from a rural high school to examine and address postsecondary education access challenges. The adult and student researchers developed and implemented two evidence-based products: (a) a conference and (b) a resource corner in the school library. Student co-researchers demonstrated an increased commitment to the project, development of postsecondary education knowledge, and development as leaders during the project. Our project demonstrates evidence of youth participatory action research being an effective approach to address problems of practice in rural education.


Discovering My Agency: Exploring how Youth Participatory Action Research Facilitates the Development of Capital by Underserved Youth in a College Access Program

January 2020

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28 Reads

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4 Citations

Teachers College Record

Background/Context College access programs aim to enhance students’ college-going capital, which includes the “knowledge, skills, or dispositions” that support students’ pathways to and through higher education. While some college access programs aim to remedy students’ “deficiencies” in capital, strengths-based approaches recognize and amplify the cultural assets and capital that marginalized individuals and their communities possess. One such approach is community-based youth participatory action research (YPAR), which empowers young people as co-researchers to investigate topics of importance in their lives. Purpose/Objective/Research Question/Focus of Study: This study explored how participation in a community-based YPAR project facilitated the college aspirations and perceived development of college-going capital among underserved (low-income, first-generation, and racially and ethnically minoritized) youth in a college access program. Setting: The setting for this research was a university-based college access and success program, Achievement Program (pseudonym). Population/Participants/Subjects Ten high school tenth-graders in Achievement Program participated in the YPAR project. All are low-income and first-generation students and eight identify as Students of Color. Intervention/Program/Practice YPAR project participants assisted in designing and executing a qualitative research study on the barriers and opportunities that first-generation and/or low-income college students face. Participants also engaged in related activities such as reflective journaling, a trip to meet with national higher education policy organizations, and community engagement. Research Design: This research utilized an interpretive case study approach. Data Collection and Analysis: Data were drawn from three one-on-one, semi-structured interviews with each participant, photo elicitation, and one focus group with all ten participants. For analysis, the authors collaboratively developed a codebook focused on the impact of YPAR participation on development of college-going capital. Findings/Results Participants showed evidence of beginning to understand that although the college-going barriers they have faced are systemic, they hold power to challenge those barriers and effect positive change. YPAR participation also enabled participants to recognize their connections with and responsibility toward their communities and helped them connect educational pursuits such as research with working to improve college access and success for other low-income and first-generation students. Conclusions/Recommendations This study provides evidence for how incorporating community-based YPAR into college access programs can empower youth from underserved populations as agents of their college-going journeys by connecting them with college-going capital located within their communities. Therefore, we recommend that college access program professionals incorporate YPAR projects into their curricula to better support underserved students’ college-going journeys.


Citations (5)


... Internal collaborations (e.g., DeCuir-Gunby et al., 2024;Means et al., 2024;Selznick et al., 2024) -those engaged within the research team -are often very common when pursuing mixed methods higher education research. You will notice that every article in this special issue is co-authored. ...

Reference:

Always Almost There: Perspectives on Mixed Methods Research in Higher Education
A Mixed Methods, Critical, Participatory Approach for Studying Rural Black Youth’s Postsecondary Education Access and Opportunity

Innovative Higher Education

... Students experience group work differently, which can impact their comfortability or participation in groups (Eddy et al., 2015;Theobald et al., 2017). Previous research has identified that women verbally participated less frequently than men in an introductory biology course (Eddy et al., 2014), and Black students have described being excluded from group work due to their race (e.g., Stanton et al., 2022). Additionally, STEM students have reported that their depression or learning disabilities can impact interactions with their peers or their ability to focus in active learning classrooms (Araghi et al., 2023;Pfeifer et al., 2023), which could influence their use of metacognition during group work. ...

Drawing on Internal Strengths and Creating Spaces for Growth: How Black Science Majors Navigate the Racial Climate at a Predominantly White Institution to Succeed

CBE—Life Sciences Education

... When students participate in educational leadership, they help surface critical analyses of existing educational practices and systems (Mansfield, 2014;Poon & Cohen, 2012), conceptualize educational practices that are more culturally relevant (Lee, 2019), and help students develop identities as knowledgeable and agentive actors in schools (Bertrand & Rodela, 2018). They also develop college-going capital (Hudson et al., 2020) and attain practices for critical civic participation Lac & Fine, 2018). And most importantly, Students of Color have demonstrated repeatedly that they seek a greater role in enacting justice-focused educational change, and that they bring extensive assets and practices to do so (Ginwright et al., 2005;Salisbury et al., 2020). ...

Discovering My Agency: Exploring how Youth Participatory Action Research Facilitates the Development of Capital by Underserved Youth in a College Access Program
  • Citing Article
  • January 2020

Teachers College Record

... Allied with this transformative potential of YPAR in communities in which young people emerge as protagonists for social change, the literature has also referred to the advantages of this approach for youth development (Buckley-Marudas & Soltis, 2020;Ozer, 2017). YPAR enhances the development not only of individual autonomy but also of a sense of identity and community (Checkoway & Richards-Schuster, 2003;Ozer, 2017), particularly in terms of increased awareness of inequalities and social issues (Means et al., 2021). This can lead to greater youth engagement in social situations that surround them (Cammarota & Fine, 2008;Cook et al., 2019;Malcolm et al., 2020) and can increase their involvement and capacity to create social change (Cammarota & Fine, 2008;Malcolm et al., 2020) and to actively participate in democratic life (Buckley-Marudas & Soltis, 2020;Checkoway & Richards-Schuster, 2003). ...

We Have Something to Say: Youth Participatory Action Research as a Promising Practice to Address Problems of Practice in Rural Schools

The Rural Educator

... La desigualdad en el acceso a la educación superior ataca a la consecución del Objetivo de Desarrollo Sostenible 4, que pretende que para el año 2030 sea posible garantizar la igualdad de acceso de todas las mujeres y los hombres a una enseñanza técnica, profesional y terciaria asequible y de calidad, incluida la universidad. La investigación internacional ha evidenciado desde hace décadas una existente desigualdad en el acceso a la educación superior e inclusive ha apuntado las causas que la motivan (Adoui, 2023;Jacobs, 1996;Lynch & O'Riordan, 1998;Means et al., 2019;Weekes-Bernard, 2010). Así, es posible agrupar las causas de la desigualdad en el acceso a la educación superior en tres grandes factores: 1) socioeconómicos, 2) políticas sociales y educativas, y 3) barreras culturales y de género. ...

A Snapshot of College Access and Inequity: Using Photography to Illuminate the Pathways to Higher Education for Underserved Youth
  • Citing Article
  • January 2019

The High School Journal