Making, Keeping, and Losing Friends
How Campuses Shape College Students’ Networks
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Making, Keeping, and Losing Friends
How Campuses Shape College Students’ Networks
Draws attention to the importance of support networks for students as they make, keep, and lose friends throughout college and beyond.
We’re all familiar with the sentiment that “college is the best time of your life.” Along with a newfound sense of freedom, students have a unique opportunity to forge lifelong friendships at a point in life when friendship is particularly important. Why is it, then, that so many college students are falling victim to what the US Surgeon General termed an “epidemic of loneliness and isolation”? How do different aspects of college life help or hinder students’ ability to form deep connections?
In Making, Keeping, and Losing Friends: How Campuses Shape College Students’ Networks, sociologist Janice M. McCabe shows that the way a college is structured—whether students live in dorms or commute, study abroad or stay close to campus, have plentiful common areas for clubs to meet or not—can either encourage or hinder the making of meaningful friendships. Based on interviews with 95 students on three distinct campuses—a small private college (Dartmouth College), a large public university (University of New Hampshire), and a non-residential community college (Manchester Community College)—McCabe captures a wide range of experiences and discovers how features of the campuses make it easier or harder for students to make and keep friends. She shows how and why, across all three institutions, some students thrive in deep and lasting friendships with their peers.
As McCabe’s research reveals, we need to look at the structures of students’ networks, the institutions they attend, and the importance of their identities in these places if we are to truly uncover and address the loneliness epidemic facing today’s young adults.
We’re all familiar with the sentiment that “college is the best time of your life.” Along with a newfound sense of freedom, students have a unique opportunity to forge lifelong friendships at a point in life when friendship is particularly important. Why is it, then, that so many college students are falling victim to what the US Surgeon General termed an “epidemic of loneliness and isolation”? How do different aspects of college life help or hinder students’ ability to form deep connections?
In Making, Keeping, and Losing Friends: How Campuses Shape College Students’ Networks, sociologist Janice M. McCabe shows that the way a college is structured—whether students live in dorms or commute, study abroad or stay close to campus, have plentiful common areas for clubs to meet or not—can either encourage or hinder the making of meaningful friendships. Based on interviews with 95 students on three distinct campuses—a small private college (Dartmouth College), a large public university (University of New Hampshire), and a non-residential community college (Manchester Community College)—McCabe captures a wide range of experiences and discovers how features of the campuses make it easier or harder for students to make and keep friends. She shows how and why, across all three institutions, some students thrive in deep and lasting friendships with their peers.
As McCabe’s research reveals, we need to look at the structures of students’ networks, the institutions they attend, and the importance of their identities in these places if we are to truly uncover and address the loneliness epidemic facing today’s young adults.
280 pages | 24 halftones, 3 line drawings, 9 tables | 6 x 9
Education: Higher Education
Sociology: Social Institutions, Social Psychology--Small Groups
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
Introduction: Friendships in College
Part One Processes of Making, Keeping, and Losing Friends
Chapter 1: Making Friends: Initial and Secondary Friendship Markets
Chapter 2: Keeping Friends: The Friendship Funnel and Friendship Expansion
Chapter 3: Losing Friends: Breaking Up and Fading Away
Part Two How Institutions and Identities Shape These Processes
Chapter 4: College Characteristics: How Networks Differ by Institution Type
Chapter 5. Student Identities: How Race, Class, and Gender Shape Networks
Conclusion: Points of Intervention
Acknowledgments
Appendix A: Researching Students’ Networks on Three Campuses
Appendix B: Tables Describing Study Participants and the Campuses
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Introduction: Friendships in College
Part One Processes of Making, Keeping, and Losing Friends
Chapter 1: Making Friends: Initial and Secondary Friendship Markets
Chapter 2: Keeping Friends: The Friendship Funnel and Friendship Expansion
Chapter 3: Losing Friends: Breaking Up and Fading Away
Part Two How Institutions and Identities Shape These Processes
Chapter 4: College Characteristics: How Networks Differ by Institution Type
Chapter 5. Student Identities: How Race, Class, and Gender Shape Networks
Conclusion: Points of Intervention
Acknowledgments
Appendix A: Researching Students’ Networks on Three Campuses
Appendix B: Tables Describing Study Participants and the Campuses
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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