25 results on '"*COMMUNITY college students"'
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2. Time Perspective and Grade Expectations as Predictors of Student Achievement and Retention in the First Year of Community College
- Author
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Acee, Taylor W., Hoff, Meagan A., Flaggs, Darolyn A., and Sylvester, Breana
- Abstract
The authors examined three motivational factors (first-year grade expectations, present-focused time perspective, and future-focused time perspective) as predictors of achievement and retention outcomes for students (N = 844) in their first semester at a predominately Hispanic-serving community college, accounting for student background characteristics. In this correlation research study, instructors administered surveys to students in a required first-year orientation course. Survey data was then merged with institutional data. The results of the multiple regression analysis suggested that first-year grade expectations, present-focused time perspective, age, ethnicity, first-generation status, and academically underprepared status were statistically significant predictors of first-semester GPA and explained 9.0% of the variation, whereas future-focused time perspective, sex, and economically disadvantaged status were not. First-year grade expectations and economically disadvantaged status significantly predicted second-semester retention; the other study predictors did not. This study expands research on malleable motivational factors educators could target to support students in their first year of community college.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Cost-Effectiveness of a Statistics-Based Approach to Developmental Mathematics Education
- Author
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Finster, Matthew and Feldman, Jill
- Abstract
Due to the low success of traditional, postsecondary remediation mathematics, The Maryland Mathematics Reform Initiative First in the World Grant (MMRI-FITW) sought to develop and implement a statistics pathway in 2- and 4-year institutions as an alternative to traditional algebra-based math, to accelerate developmental mathematics students' progress into credit-bearing postsecondary mathematics courses. In this study, we use cost to students and cost to institutions to estimate the cost per student and assess the cost-effectiveness of MMRI-FITW statistics-based vs. traditional algebra-based approach to developmental mathematics education for increasing student enrollment in college credit-bearing mathematics. The results indicate participating in the MMRI-FITW statistics-based vs. traditional algebra-based approach reduces education costs by approximately 7 percent and is 36 percent more cost-effective for increasing student enrollment in college-credit mathematics. The article concludes with the implications of the cost-effectiveness results for scaling the MMRI-FITW statistics-based approach.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Factors Associated With Completion: Pathways Through Developmental Mathematics.
- Author
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Howell, Elizabeth and Walkington, Candace
- Subjects
COMMUNITY college students ,PANEL analysis ,DEVELOPMENTAL programs ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,COMMUNITY colleges - Abstract
This study examines two 5-year longitudinal data sets of community college students (n = 595 and n = 593) to explore factors associated with successful outcomes in developmental mathematics. Logistic regression models consider the role of demographic factors, course format, and student support structures on the likelihood of a student completing the developmental sequence and subsequently passing a credit-level mathematics course. Additional linear regression models examine the time required to complete developmental coursework. Tutoring has a strong association with positive student outcomes, as does full-time enrollment and developmental mathematics coursework grades. Alternative course formats are also associated with increased likelihood of success for students, but some alternative formats delay a student's time line. Implications for developmental mathematics programs in community college settings are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Early Academic Momentum: Factors Contributing to Community College Transfer Students' STEM Degree Attainment.
- Author
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Zhang, Yi Leaf
- Subjects
COMMUNITY college students ,TRANSFER students ,TRANSFER of students ,GRADE point average ,LOGISTIC regression analysis - Abstract
Guided by the notion of academic momentum, this study drew data from longitudinal transcript records at a large public 4-year research university and examined factors that specifically contribute to community college transfer students' academic momentum. It also explored how early academic momentum along with students' sociodemographic characteristics impact degree attainment in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) fields of study. This study conducted multinomial logistic regression analysis and found that certain students' background characteristics (i.e., gender, age, and family income), community college academic achievement (i.e., associate degree completion, and number of community college credits accepted), and early academic performance at the 4-year university (math and English preparedness, number of credit hours attempted, and first-semester grade point average) were significantly related to transfer students' likelihood of obtaining a STEM degree. The findings provide new knowledge about academic momentum and could be used to enhance the community college pathway to STEM degree completion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Coaching Toward Completion: Academic Coaching Factors Influencing Community College Student Success.
- Author
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Pechac, Sharmaine and Slantcheva-Durst, Snejana
- Subjects
COMMUNITY college students ,ACADEMIC achievement ,SOCIAL influence ,COMMUNITY colleges - Abstract
Aligned with the American Association of Community College's 21st Century Initiative for community college completion, coaching has emerged in higher education as a promising practice for student support. Although hundreds of community colleges have implemented coaching programs, few studies have explored the practice of coaching and its relationship with student success. This study examines the influence of specific coaching factors, including the frequency, nature, and contact modes, on community college student persistence. The study utilizes a secondary data set collected by the Ohio Association of Community Colleges. The analysis of the records of 5,808 students from 15 Midwest community colleges engaged in a Coaches Program shows that 31.5% of the variance in credit-hour completion can be explained by 17 factors related to student demographics, community college characteristics, and coaching factors. This established relationship between coaching factors and credit-hour completion is an important contribution of the study to existing research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Effects of Academic Momentum on Degree Attainment for Students Beginning College at 2-Year Institutions.
- Author
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Ann Clovis, Meghan and Chang, Mido
- Subjects
ACADEMIC degrees ,COMMUNITY college students ,COLLEGE students ,GRADE point average ,TRANSFER of students - Abstract
Research has shown that academic momentum is a key factor in degree completion for students attending 4-year institutions. The characteristics of 2-year students (also called community college students) often lead them to engage in behaviors contrary to the theory of academic momentum, and these behaviors theoretically reduce their likelihood of attaining a degree. Community college students often delay entry into college, attend part time, earn fewer credits within their first year, and have lower freshman grade point averages. This study investigated the effects of academic momentum on degree attainment for students who attended only a 2-year college and for students who transferred to a 4-year college. Data were obtained from a large, nationally representative longitudinal data set. The academic momentum predictor variables (credits earned and grade point average within the first year of college, and the number of months between exiting high school and entering college) were significant predictors for both 2-year and transfer students. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Educational Opportunity Fund Program and Community College Student Retention.
- Author
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Watson, Aretha and Chen, Rong
- Subjects
COMPENSATORY education ,COMMUNITY college students ,SCHOOL dropout prevention ,SUPPORT services (Education) ,EDUCATIONAL fundraising - Abstract
Although the existence of state-funded student support services programs dates to the 1960s, studies on how such programs play a role in student success are scarce. By utilizing unique institutional data and a comprehensive conceptual model integrating multiple theories, this study examines the relationship between the New Jersey educational opportunity fund program and first-semester retention at a community college. Results reveal that educational opportunity fund has a positive effect on student retention, and the effect is consistent across different student subgroups. This study provides empirical evidence for greater government commitment needed to fully fund student support services for historically underserved students in community colleges. Future research is suggested to offer additional insight into the effect of government-funded student support services programs on college student retention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Financially Eligible Pell Grant Community College Students’ Perceptions of Institutional Integration.
- Author
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Ocean, Mia
- Subjects
PELL grants ,COMMUNITY college students ,COLLEGE students ,ACADEMIC achievement ,STUDENT financial aid - Abstract
There is a wealth of literature on the integration of university students increasing retention and ultimate completion, yet much less is known about the connections or disconnections that exist for community college students. Therefore, I interviewed financially eligible Pell Grant community college students (n = 62) about their connections to their institutions, and I subsequently conducted a thematic analysis of the data. Students’ experiences of integration ranged from feeling they created a family to perceiving unfair treatment. Overwhelmingly, students felt connected to their community college. However, some students who were not meeting satisfactory academic progress described a disconnection to their community college. The results indicate a need to reevaluate the satisfactory academic progress criteria and develop an integration model specific for low-income community college students. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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10. Predicting Community College and University Student Success: A Test of the Triadic Reciprocal Model for Two Populations.
- Author
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Heller, Monica L. and Cassady, Jerrell C.
- Subjects
COMMUNITY college students ,COLLEGE students ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,ACADEMIC achievement ,PREDICTION models ,SOCIAL cognitive theory - Abstract
The current study explored the differential influences that behavioral learning strategies (i.e., cognitive-metacognitive, resource management), motivational profiles, and academic anxiety appraisals have on college-level learners in two unique learning contexts. Using multivariate analysis of variance and discriminant analysis, the study first compared these variables across learners from a community college and traditional 4-year university located within the same regional area. The study also employed a series of multiple regression analyses to investigate the influence of these variables in predicting student performance outcomes (i.e., grade point average). The results illustrate that prior research on those factors most salient within student academic success prediction models within a social cognitive framework function as expected for the university population. However, the community college learner experience deviates significantly from this standard model. For the community college learner, it is the environmental factor that appears to be the most significant to predicting student success. These findings highlight those factors most influential in academic performance outcomes among diverse student populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Possible Selves, Possible Futures.
- Author
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Casey Ozaki, C.
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGY of college students ,DECISION making ,CONCEPTS ,STOPOUTS ,QUALITATIVE research - Abstract
This qualitative study explored the external and internal reasons involved in students’ decisions to return to college after an extended absence. Specifically, it sought to explore the role of students’ concepts of who they might be (or want to avoid becoming) in the college and career domains of their lives, their possible selves. Analysis of participant interviews revealed two educational paths that were partially shaped by students’ college possible selves as they initially entered college. The different educational paths and influence of possible selves and other important factors came to light as students discussed critical decision-making points along their journeys. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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12. Community College Student Success: From Boardrooms to Classrooms.
- Author
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Chen, Yu "April"
- Subjects
COMMUNITY college students ,ACADEMIC achievement ,CLASSROOMS ,HIGHER education ,MINORITY students ,POSTSECONDARY education - Published
- 2015
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13. UNDERSTANDING COMMUNITY COLLEGE STUDENT PERSISTENCE THROUGH PHOTOVOICE: AN EMERGENT MODEL.
- Author
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LATZ, AMANDA O.
- Subjects
COMMUNITY colleges ,PERSISTENCE (Personality trait) ,COMMUNITY college students ,GRADUATES ,WORK environment ,CONSTRUCTIVISM (Education) - Abstract
Because it has been noted that a more educated workforce is necessary to meet the demands of the future workplace, community colleges have experienced significant pressures to generate more graduates. High instances of attrition and low rates of credential obtainment among students, however, have historically been tenuous issues for community colleges. The purpose of this article is to put forward, in the form of a constructivist grounded theory, a model of community college student persistence based on the findings from a photovoice project aimed at understanding the educational lives of community college students. The Emergent Model of Community College Student Persistence has the potential to assist community college faculty, administrators, policy makers, and other stakeholders understand student persistence decisions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. The Difference a Cohort Makes: Understanding Developmental Learning Communities in Community Colleges.
- Author
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Wathington, Heather D., Pretlow, Joshua, and Mitchell, Claire
- Subjects
COMMUNITY college students ,CURRICULUM ,CLASSROOM environment ,ACADEMIC support programs ,COHORT analysis - Abstract
Learning communities, a small cohort of students enrolled together in two or more linked courses, have become a popular intervention to help under-prepared students succeed in college. Though learning communities abound in practice, the key structural feature of a learning community—the cohort—may not be fully understood. Authors posit that a cohort needs both a structural and communal component to function well. This study examines qualitative data from a pilot site and four community colleges that participated in a random assignment evaluation. Authors observed differences between learning community and non-learning community experiences in terms of classroom climate and academic support networks for students. Differences can be attributed to both the structural nature of the cohort as well as emergent social group dynamics. As such, the cohorts within learning communities appeared to act as mechanisms for increasing student interaction and interdependence. The authors anticipate that these gains in the student experience will enhance student retention. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Community College Retention and Access Issues: A View from the Field.
- Author
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Rankin, Kristie R., Katsinas, Stephen G., and Hardy, David E.
- Subjects
COMMUNITY college students ,SCHOOL dropout prevention ,CHIEF executive officers ,GRANTS (Money) ,CHILD care - Abstract
Drawing on Rankin's 2008 study and literature on retention and community colleges, this study presents perceptions of community college Chief Executive Officers (CEOs) and Chief Academic Officers (CAOs) in relation to issues affecting retention and access. Childcare, transportation, and funding concerns are examined. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Adjustment of Community College Students at a Four-Year University: Role and Relevance of Transfer Student Capital for Student Retention.
- Author
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Laanan, Frankie Santos, Starobin, Soko S., and Eggleston, Latrice E.
- Subjects
COMMUNITY college students ,SCHOOL dropout prevention ,MINORITIES ,POSTSECONDARY education ,INTERNET surveys - Abstract
Community colleges play a critical role in the pathway to a baccalaureate degree for millions of students, especially among women and ethnic minorities. This study investigates the complexity of the transfer experience among students who began their postsecondary education at a 2-year college and transferred to a large 4-year university. Specifically, the goal of this study was to move beyond the “transfer shock” concept by examining the role and relevance of “transfer student capital” for student retention. Using the L-TSQ instrument, the 133-item online survey reported data from over 900 students regarding their demographic characteristics, community college experiences, and university experiences. Two hypotheticals were employed to understand the factors that influence academic and social transfer adjustment. The findings of this study inform student affairs professionals, admissions oficers, retention programs, students, and faculty. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Making Sense of Disparities in Mathematics Remediation: What is the Role of Student Retention?
- Author
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Peter Bahr
- Subjects
MATHEMATICS ,RETENTION of college students ,COMMUNITY colleges ,COMMUNITY college students ,COLLEGE attendance ,PROBABILITY theory ,SCHOOL dropout prevention ,UNIVERSITY & college entrance requirements ,ABILITY - Abstract
Recent research on mathematics remediation in community colleges indicates that there are large differences in the rate of successful remediation between students of differing levels of initial math deficiency. One might presume that these "skill gaps" in successful remediation are a result of differing rates of student retention. That is, presumably poorer math skills are associated with a shorter duration of college attendance (lower persistence) and, in turn, a shorter duration of college attendance is associated with a lower likelihood of successful remediation. However, the limited prior evidence does not appear to support this explanation for the "skill gaps" in successful remediation. In an effort to make sense of this incongruity, I executed a detailed analysis of the relationship between level of math deficiency at college entry, persistence, and successful remediation in math. In contrast to the conclusions of prior work, I find that differences in persistence contribute strongly to the "skill gaps" in successful remediation, although this contribution is masked by the fact that the relationship between persistence and the likelihood successful remediation is neither proportional nor equal across levels of initial math deficiency, both of which were implicit analytical assumptions of prior work on this topic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. The Community College Transfer Calculator: Identifying the Course-Taking Patterns that Predict Transfer.
- Author
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Linda Hagedorn, Alberto Cabrera, and George Prather
- Subjects
COMMUNITY colleges ,CURRICULUM ,COMPUTER software ,FACULTY advisors ,PROBABILITY theory ,STUDENT counselors ,COMMUNITY college students ,FORECASTING - Abstract
Using a newly developed software application entitled The Community College Transfer Calculator©, this article both quantifies the effect of specific course-taking patterns and stresses the need for an easy to understand tool for community college academic advisors, faculty, and students. The "Calculator" calculates the likelihood of transfer given specific demographic and courses taken and/or scheduled. Moreover, the user can see the difference in the likelihood of transfer that changes in course-taking predict. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Impact of Learning Communities in Developmental English on Community College Student Retention and Persistence.
- Author
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Randall Barnes and William Piland
- Subjects
LEARNING communities ,COMMUNICATION & education ,COMMUNITY college students ,RETENTION of college students ,CASE studies ,COMMUNITY colleges ,CITIES & towns ,EDUCATIONAL planning ,CURRICULUM - Abstract
This investigation was a case study to measure the retention and persistence effects of a learning community in developmental English at an urban community college. The study used student demographic and course outcome data to quantify the extent to which learning community participation could contribute toward remedying the historically low retention and persistence rates among a diverse student population in community colleges. The learning communities in this study consisted of developmental reading and writing courses linked in pairs at the same level, considered to be either one or two levels below college level English. Findings revealed a relationship between learning communities and improved retention in developmental writing courses for all ethnic groups. In addition, retention and persistence was improved for Latino students. The study also revealed that learning communities were most effective when utilized at the higher developmental English level courses compared to the lower level courses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The Moving Target: Student Financial Aid and Community College Student Retention.
- Author
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Michael Kennamer, Stephen Katsinas, and Randall Schumacker
- Subjects
STUDENT financial aid ,COMMUNITY college students ,RETENTION of college students ,SCHOOL enrollment ,DATA analysis ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,EDUCATIONAL surveys ,TUITION - Abstract
This article reviews recent literature on student financial aid as a retention tool at community colleges. Enrollment and tuition data from the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS), and federal direct grant student aid data from the IPEDS Student Financial Aid Survey are used to analyze changes from 2000-01 to 2005-06. The new 2005 Carnegie Basic Classification of Associate's Colleges is used to reveal differences among rural, suburban, and urban community college types, and the Grapevine definition is used to reveal differences among states with local funding and those without significant local funding. A key finding is that the 40% increase in tuition and the 2.2 million new students enrolled in the past five years overwhelmed the very modest increases in federal direct grant student aid (Pell and Supplemental Education Opportunity Grants) over the same period, lessening the ability of student aid to positively impact retention at America's community colleges. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. An Exploration of Tinto's Integration Framework for Community College Students.
- Author
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Melinda Karp, Katherine Hughes, and Lauren O'Gara
- Subjects
COMMUNITY college students ,SOCIAL integration ,CURRICULUM frameworks ,INFORMATION processing ,CLASSROOMS ,SOCIAL institutions ,INTERVIEWING - Abstract
Tinto's integration framework is often assumed to be inapplicable to the study of student persistence at community colleges because one of the linchpins of the frameworkâsocial integrationâis considered unlikely to occur for students at these institutions. Community college students are thought to lack the time to participate in activities, such as clubs, that would facilitate social integration. Using in-depth interviews with students at two urban community colleges in the Northeast, we examine the ways that first-year community college students engage with their institutions. We find that the majority of them do develop attachments to their institutions. Moreover, this sense of attachment is related to their persistence in the second year of college. We also find that this integration is both academic and social. Contrary to findings from other studies that apply Tinto's framework, we find that these two forms of integration develop in concert for community college students. The same activities lead to both academic and social relatedness. This is particularly true for information networks that students develop in the classroom. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Understanding Student Swirl: The Role of Environmental Factors and Retention Efforts in the Later Academic Success of Suspended Students.
- Author
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Yan Wang and Tom Pilarzyk
- Subjects
RETENTION of college students ,ACADEMIC achievement ,COMMUNITY college students ,STUDENT suspension ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,STUDENT attitudes ,EDUCATIONAL background ,CURRICULUM - Abstract
"Student swirl," or the inconsistent flow in and out of college coursework from term-to-term, institution-to-institution, reflects the non-traditional nature of many community college students. Swirl can be triggered by such stressors as: balancing work, school, and family obligations; financial challenges; and health problems. In turn, it influences irregular enrollment and lack of academic success. Swirl also occurs intra-institutionally, affected by college re-entry policies once students are suspended for academic reasons. Three initiatives serve as pathways back into college for suspended students at one Midwestern institution. This study explores their effects on success, as well as the role of life challenges, academic-related skills, and student background and commitment to succeed. While retention initiatives affect later performance, factors contributing to intra-institutional swirl playa stronger role. Implications for both student retention and institutional effectiveness are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. The Academic and Social Integration of Persisting Community College Transfer Students.
- Author
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Barbara Townsend and Kristin Wilson
- Subjects
TRANSFER students ,COMMUNITY college students ,COLLEGE attendance ,SOCIAL integration ,QUALITATIVE research ,COLLEGE students ,RESEARCH universities & colleges ,ACADEMIC degrees - Abstract
This qualitative study sought to discern the applicability of Tinto's theory of the importance of academic and social integration to students' persistence by interviewing community college transfer students who had persisted for several semesters in a large, public, research extensive university. Twelve students who participated in a 2004 study about factors affecting the transfer process and their subsequent integration into the receiving institution were interviewed again in 2006 about their academic and social integration into the university. The researchers found that persisting community college transfer students' academic and social integration needs appeared to be different from those of first-year, traditional-age college students at a residence-oriented 4-year institution. The primary institutional influences affecting their integration were university size, the opportunity to join clubs in their major, and the opportunity to conduct research with a professor. Individual or situational influences were working and living off-campus and having the goal of completing the baccalaureate, but not necessarily at the receiving university. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
24. Retention of Community College Students: Related Student and Institutional Characteristics.
- Author
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Craig, Alfred and Ward, Cynthia
- Subjects
RETENTION of college students ,COMMUNITY college students ,HIGHER education ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,EDUCATION policy ,ACADEMIC achievement ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,COHORT analysis - Abstract
Public community colleges were established to improve access to higher education. However, access for all often results in low student retention and in the loss of effort, time, and money for students and institutions. This institutional specific retention study, which examined student factors, both demographic and academic, and institutional factors, was completed at a public community college in New England. Working from an existing database, the data on a cohort of first-time full-time students (N = 1,729) were tracked through the period fall 1998 through fall 2003 and were analyzed using descriptive statistics, analysis of variance, and logistic regression analysis. The findings resulted in a set of recommended changes in institutional policies and practices aimed at improving student retention and, thereby, greater success for the students and the institution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
25. CAN WELFARE MOTHERS HACK IT IN COLLEGE? A COMPARISON OF ACHIEVEMENT BETWEEN TANF RECIPIENTS AND GENERAL POPULATION COMMUNITY COLLEGE STUDENTS.
- Author
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JUDY FENSTER and PhD
- Subjects
COMMUNITY college students ,COMMUNITY colleges ,ACADEMIC achievement ,PSYCHOLOGY education ,GRADING of students - Abstract
The achievement of a group of undergraduate students enrolled in a pilot program for welfare recipients in the form of TANF (Temporary Aid to Needy Families) was compared with the achievement of general population students at an urban community college. Grades attained in a basic level, introductory Psychology course were used to measure academic achievement. Additionally, TANF students' rates of academic retention and election to the Dean's list were compared to rates among the general population community college students, over a period of four semesters. Students in the TANF program attained higher grades in the Psychology course, were elected to the Dean's list at higher rates, and retained their enrollments at equal rates to general population students. The findings suggest that, given proper support, TANF recipients can become successful college students. Implications for the current debate around welfare reform, specifically around the issue of allowing secondary education to substitute for TANF work requirements, are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
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