Peer Financial Mentoring in Higher Education: Research to Practice

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Date

2024-02-15

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Higher Education Financial Wellness Alliance

Abstract

It is critical for college students to develop a sense of financial literacy before they enter the workforce (Durband & Britt, 2012; Goetz et al., 2011). However, financial literacy programs on college campuses are sparse (Britt et al., 2015), and those campuses with programs often do not utilize a peer financial mentoring model. As a result, this presentation provides an overview of a series of studies that engaged with 54 collegiate peer financial mentors across seven institutions of higher education. This study employs a phenomenological qualitative approach using focus group data collection techniques (Saldaña & Omasta, 2022). We purposively sampled participants from institutions of higher education with peer financial mentoring programs over a three-year span (2020-2023) through research team connections with the Higher Education Financial Wellness Alliance. Participants attended virtual focus groups with colleagues from their institution, resulting in 22 focus groups held with 54 peer financial mentors across seven institutions of higher education.

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Keywords

higher education, financial wellness, peer financial mentoring, peer mentoring, college, college students, financial literacy, money management, budgeting, credit cards, student loans, university

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CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 DEED Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 International

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Presentation