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Understanding Inequity in Graduation Rates at Hispanic-Serving Institutions (HSIs): An Intersectional Analysis by Race, Gender, and First-Generation College Status

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  • Christopher Erwin

    (Department of Sociology and Criminology, University of New Mexico, MSC05 3080, 1915 Roma NE Ste., 1103, Albuquerque, NM 87106, USA)

  • Nancy López

    (Department of Sociology and Criminology, University of New Mexico, MSC05 3080, 1915 Roma NE Ste., 1103, Albuquerque, NM 87106, USA)

  • E. Diane Torres-Velásquez

    (College of Education and Human Sciences, University of New Mexico Technology and Education Center, Albuquerque, NM 87106, USA)

  • Cynthia Wise

    (Department of Borderlands and Ethnic Studies, New Mexico State University, O’Donnell Hall, 1220 Stewart Street, Las Cruces, NM 88003, USA)

Abstract

We examine complex inequities that emerge when race, gender, and first-generation college status are treated as interdependent, rather than independent statuses, for assessing student outcomes at Hispanic-Serving Institutions (HSIs). Drawing on student-level administrative data from two public HSIs in the U.S. Southwest, we analyze four-year graduation and placement in developmental English and mathematics. Using continuing-generation college white women as the reference group, we estimate marginal effects and then construct linear combinations for twenty intersectional social locations defined by race, gender, and first-generation college status. Our findings show that first-generation American Indian men, first-generation college Black men, and first-generation college Hispanic men experience some of the largest achievement gaps in both graduation and developmental placement, gaps that would remain obscured in conventional reporting by race, gender, or class alone. We argue that quantitative intersectionality, grounded in critical race and intersectionality scholarship, offers a value-added approach to state-based institutional analytics that can inform equity metrics, accountability systems, and resource allocation at HSIs and beyond. We conclude with recommendations for redesigning data infrastructures, reporting practices, and equity initiatives to better align HSI servingness with the lived realities of structurally marginalized students.

Suggested Citation

  • Christopher Erwin & Nancy López & E. Diane Torres-Velásquez & Cynthia Wise, 2026. "Understanding Inequity in Graduation Rates at Hispanic-Serving Institutions (HSIs): An Intersectional Analysis by Race, Gender, and First-Generation College Status," Social Sciences, MDPI, vol. 15(1), pages 1-18, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jscscx:v:15:y:2026:i:1:p:33-:d:1835403
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