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Staying Within the Margins: The Educational Stories of First-Generation, Low-Income College StudentsCole, Diane Lyn 01 January 2008 (has links)
his research addressed educational persistence among first-generation, low-income college students. The educational paths of 22 first-generation, low-income undergraduate students attending a large, urban university in the Northwest region of the United States were examined through a narrative framework. Half of the participants had persisted from year one to year two, and the other half left the university after their first year. Analytic procedures consisted of thematic qualitative coding, an analysis of student trajectories over educational histories, and the reconstruction of narrative stories. Data were used to examine: (1) How first-generation, low-income students understood and described their journey through their first year, (2) Reasons some students gave for leaving the university, (3) Meanings students gave to their experiences in college and how those meanings influenced future decisions, and (4) Differences between the stories of students who persisted versus those who left.
The first-generation, low-income students who participated in this study were individually diverse and took various paths through college. After prolonged contact, evidence of interrupted enrollment and transfer among colleges was shown for approximately half of the participants. The descriptive codes most frequently discussed were financial issues, aspects of self, and family. Students described motivations for college in terms of themes related to family, gaining practical skills, existential discovery, desire for the college adventure, and affirmation of personal attributes. Students left the institution as a result of academic challenges, external life events, financial difficulties, dissatisfaction with the college process, unclear goals or reasons for continuation, and a need to stay near family. Students who persisted in college indicated adequate pre-college academic preparation, social connection to the university, family support for continuation, adequate financial resources, and support from social and cultural brokers that helped them navigate college. Findings from this study suggest social class, financial, individual and family contextual variables be added to Tinto's (1975, 1993) classic model of student departure. Higher education policies suggested by data include partnering with families, reducing social class barriers and providing better information to students about the hidden costs of transfer and interrupted enrollment.
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Social capital in engineering educationBrown, Shane 28 April 2005 (has links)
A theoretical argument is presented to suggest that engineering curriculum be
designed to develop social capital. Additionally, the value of social capital in the
retention of students in the College of Engineering, and the development, role, and value
of social capital in an electrical engineering laboratory is evaluated. Data collected
includes participant observations, informal and formal student interviews, and a
researcher-designed survey. Social capital consists of interaction among individuals
(networks), social rules that encourage interactions such as trust and reciprocity (norms),
and the value of these networks and norms to the individual and the group. A large body
of evidence suggests that social capital is valuable in terms of retention and multiple
measures of academic achievement. The importance of social capital in retention was
verified by students that have left engineering and those that remain, in terms of
interactions with peers, teaching assistants, and engineering faculty; and a lack of sense
of community in freshman engineering courses. Students that have left engineering
differed in their perceptions of social capital from those that remain in their frustrations
with teaching methods that encourage little discussion or opportunities to ask questions
about assumptions or approaches. The open-ended nature of laboratory assignments,
extensive required troubleshooting, and lack of specific directions from the teaching
assistants were found to encourage the development of social capital in the laboratory
setting. Degree centrality, a network measure of social capital as the number of ties an
individual has within a social network, was found to be positively correlated with
laboratory grade. Student perceptions of the importance of interactions with other
students on success in the laboratory setting has a negative model effect on academic
achievement in the laboratory. In contrast, student perceptions of the quality of
interactions with teaching assistants has a positive effect on measures of academic
achievement. The results suggest that social capital is more important to some students
than others in terms of retention and academic achievement. Recommendations are made
to identify students requiring social capital to be successful, and to provide opportunities
for these students to develop social capital. / Graduation date: 2005
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A qualitative study of successful Hispanic transfer students at a community collegeGutierrez, Roberto 21 January 2003 (has links)
Graduation date: 2003
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A case study to investigate retention efforts at Mt. Hood Community CollegeRawe, Carl L. 24 November 1997 (has links)
This case study describes and analyzes the experiences of Mt. Hood Community
College (MHCC) in its implementation of four retention interventions. Each of the four
interventions are described in detail. Discussion is framed within the context that retention
is a by-product of institutional renewal brought about by implementing interventions that
have campus-wide impacts. Discussion and analysis probe the interventions to reveal their
benefits to the college, addressing the question as to whether MHCC is being effective in
its retention planning.
Discussion and recommendations are framed around three insights discovered in
the course of the case study. These three insights are seen as key factors in retention
intervention. Each of the insights is followed by recommendations intended to mitigate gaps
in retention planning that the insights discovered. The insights and recommendations are:
1. Intervention needs to be holistic. Two recommendations were suggested to
strengthen the holistic approach. The first of these is a mentoring program, both peer and
faculty. The second recommendation is to strengthen faculty-student-staff relationships
outside the classroom by an intervention such as the establishment of learning communities.
2. Intervention needs to use high quality information. Recommendations were
to pay more attention to less than full-time students, to develop a formal withdrawal policy
and process, and to collect additional student intention data.
3. Intervention needs to track points of student economic impact. The single
recommendation for insight three is to thoroughly track and analyze the points where
students interact economically with the college. This is thought to be crucial as the areas of
economic contact play an active not passive role in enrollment and retention.
The case study found that MHCC's experiences with intervention are consistent
with literature findings, have been effective for MHCC, and the insights and
recommendations may be helpful to other community colleges in retention planning. / Graduation date: 1998
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Developmental education as a component of persistence in a postsecondary proprietary institutionRoberts, Barbara L. 06 May 1998 (has links)
Persistence has been identified as an issue at all levels of higher education,
and numerous strategies have been attempted to stem the flow of students who leave
an institution before completing their programs of study. Persistence research
abounds at the community college, four-year college and university levels, but little
research on the subject is available at the postsecondary proprietary level. The
purpose of this qualitative case study was to research and describe the developmental
program recently undertaken at The Art Institute of Dallas (AID), and to compare the
findings to the literature on community colleges.
Objectives were to 1) examine the forces which caused AID to implement a
developmental program; 2) examine how the program was perceived to be working;
3) compare the description of the program at AID to descriptions of those in
community colleges, as described in the literature; 4) examine individual
perceptions of benefits or drawbacks to the school as a direct result of the new
program; and 5) determine if the key informants saw the developmental program as a
vehicle to raise persistence and enhance student success.
Originally, AID was an open admissions school, offering basic skills help
only in tutorial situations. With the addition of General Education courses to the
various curricula, the need for an Academic Improvement Center was discerned.
Eventually, the school also saw the need to establish admissions standards, coupled
with placement testing, to identify and serve underprepared students. Persistence
became an issue, along with the state mandate of The Texas Academic Skills
Program (TASP), and both contributed to the establishment of a comprehensive
developmental education program.
Results indicated the need for a student better prepared in numeracy and
literacy skills, reflected in the requirements of employers needing employees with
abilities to read technical documents, to write reports, to work in teams, and to solve
problems. The findings of this study suggest the addition of a comprehensive
developmental education program at AID positively affected student persistence.
Just as the research on community college developmental studies history,
development, and progress unfolded, so also went this postsecondary proprietary
school. / Graduation date: 1998
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African American students' perceptions of a public university a qualitative study /Smith, Paula Louise Hairston, January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Ohio State University, 2006. / Title from first page of PDF file. Includes bibliographical references (p. 123-134).
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The impact of an academic support program on the success and performance of at-risk freshmen residence students /Rowsell, LoriLynn, January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (M.Ed.)--Memorial University of Newfoundland, 2005. / Bibliography: leaves 67-72.
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A comparison of community college student performance, retention, and demographics in online and onground courses /Crabtree, Linda F. January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Missouri-Columbia, 2000. / Typescript. Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 134-141). Also available on the Internet.
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Outcomes of an early intervention program on academic success : a comparison of open-door and suspension policies /Bishop, Camilla Linda, January 2001 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Oregon, 2001. / Typescript. Includes vita and abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 259-267). Also available for download via the World Wide Web; free to University of Oregon users.
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A comparison of community college student performance, retention, and demographics in online and onground coursesCrabtree, Linda F. January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Missouri-Columbia, 2000. / Typescript. Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 134-141). Also available on the Internet.
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