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Amy E. Stich

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Associate Professor of Higher Education and Graduate Program Coordinator

Amy E. Stich is an associate professor and graduate program coordinator at the Louise McBee Institute of Higher Education and an affiliate faculty member with the Interdisciplinary Qualitative Studies program at the University of Georgia. Stich uses sociological perspectives and qualitative methodologies to study the mechanisms that stratify and reproduce inequality in higher education. Her research has been supported by the National Academy of Education/Spencer Foundation and the National Science Foundation. Stich is also a research fellow on a critical participatory action research project examining inequalities in postsecondary debt and repayment funded by the William T. Grant Foundation. She is the author of more than 40 publications, including Access to Inequality: Reconsidering Class, Knowledge, and Capital in Higher Education (Lexington Books) and co-editor of The Working Classes and Higher Education: Inequality of Access, Opportunity, and Outcome (Routledge). At the McBee Institute, Stich teaches introductory and advanced courses in qualitative research and social theory. She currently serves on the editorial boards of the British Journal of the Sociology of Education, The Journal of Higher Education, and The Review of Higher Education.

Stich received her PhD from the University at Buffalo where she was also a postdoctoral research associate on a longitudinal ethnographic study of student transitions from high school to college, supported by the National Science Foundation. Before joining the Institute of Higher Education, Stich was an assistant professor in the Department of Leadership, Educational Psychology, and Foundations at Northern Illinois University.

Curriculum Vitae:
Stich CV 2025 (52.8 KB)
Email:
astich@uga.edu
Education:
  • Ph.D., University at Buffalo
Research Interests:

Dr. Stich's primary interests of scholarly inquiry are in sociology of education, qualitative methodologies, and social theory.

Grants:

Stich, A. E., Research Fellow. Reducing Inequities in Postsecondary Debt Repayment through a Multi-Sector Research-Practice Partnership. William T. Grant Foundation, (Co-Sponsors: Doris Duke Charitable Foundation and Spencer Foundation), $650,000 (UGA Sub-award, $72,410).

Webber, K.L. PI, & Stich, A.E., co-PI. The Effect of Geographic Locale on Access to Work-Related Experiential Activities. National Science Foundation, $690,027.

Stich, A. E., PI. The Structure and Consequence of Postsecondary Tracking, National Academy of Education/Spencer Postdoctoral Fellowship, $70,000.00.

 

*Case, C., *Cumbass, K., & Stich, A. E. (2024). In defense of democratic qualitative research teams: A Bourdieusian approach to critical reflexivity. Qualitative Inquiry.

Stich, A. E., Spencer, G., *Johnson, B., & *Baser, S. (2023). Option B or plan b? School counselors’ sensemaking of a dual enrollment policy in Georgia. Innovative Higher Education.

Stich, A. E. & Crain, A. (2023). Structuring middle-class aspirations: The role of habitus and higher education. British Journal of Sociology of Education.

Stich, A. E. (2020). Beneath the White Noise of Postsecondary Sorting: A Case Study of the “Low” Track in Higher Education. The Journal of Higher Education.

Whatley, M. & Stich, A. E. (2020). From exclusive to inclusive: A mixed-methods investigation of study abroad participation and practices. The Journal of Higher Education.

Cipollone, K., Stich, A. E. & Weis, L. (2020). STEM for All: Student Identities and The Paradox of STEM Democratization. Teachers College Record, 122(2), 1-67.

Stich, A.E. (2018). Stratification with honors: A case study of the “high” track in higher education. Special Issue of Social Sciences (Guest Editors: Simon Marginson and Vikki Bolivar), 7(10), 1-17.

Stich, A.E. & Freie, C. (Eds.). (2016). The working classes and higher education: inequality of access, opportunity, and outcome. New York: Routledge.

Stich, A. (2012, 2014). Access to inequality: reconsidering class, knowledge, and capital in higher education. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books.

Cipollone, K. & Stich, A.E. (2017). Shadow capital: the democratization of college preparatory education. Sociology of Education, 90(4), 333-354.

Stich, A.E. & Cipollone, K. (2017). In and through the urban educational ‘reform churn’: The illustrative power of qualitative longitudinal research. Urban Education.

Stich, A.E. & Reeves, T.D. (2016). Massive open online courses and underrepresented students’ access to higher education in the United States. The Internet and Higher Education, 32, 58-71.

Weis, L., Eisenhart, M., Cipollone, K, Stich, A., Nikischer, A., Hanson, J., Ohle, S., & Dominguez, R. (2015). In the guise of STEM education reform: opportunity structures and outcomes in inclusive STEM-focused high schools. American Educational Research Journal, 52(6),1024-1059.

Stich, A.E., & Colyar, J.E. (2013). Thinking relationally about studying ‘up.’ British Journal of Sociology of Education, 36(5), 729-746.

Courses Regularly Taught:
Of note:
  • 2016 National Academy of Education/Spencer Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow
Events featuring Amy E. Stich
Zoom (advance registration required)

Join the UGA Qualitative Research Program for the UGA QUAL Lab Speaker Series

In Defense of Democratic Qualitative Research Teams in the Neoliberal Academy

Monday, October 31st from noon – 1 p.m. EST

Zoom link registration: https://bit.ly/UGAQL01

News Featuring Amy E. Stich

Melissa Whatley (PhD 2019) and Amy Stich study inequalities in access to study abroad opportunities. Their latest research findings are published in The Journal of Higher Education online.

IHE faculty, staff, alumnus, and students attended the 17th Annual Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Freedom Breakfast honoring the legacy of Dr. King and celebrating the work of area peacemakers. The inspirational annual event is coordinated through a partnership of…

​As part of UGA's Certificate in Diversity & Inclusion (CDI) for university faculty and staff, Amy Stich will teach a course on first-generation college students on Wednesday, November 6. 

Amy Stich delivered a keynote address at the British Sociological Association’s International Bourdieu Study Group Conference on Friday, September 27 at Sheffield Hallam University in Sheffield, England.

In addition to the large group of IHE faculty and students who presented papers at the AERA conference in Toronto (April 5-8), Noble Jones (PhD 2018) received the 2019 Outstanding Dissertation Award from AERA's Division J, and Associate Professor Tim Cain…

Two new faculty members, Amy Stich and Gregory Wolniak, explore the impact of higher education.

The Institute of Higher Education at the University of Georgia will welcome two new faculty members in the fall.

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