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Sriram, Rishi; Cheatle, Joseph; Weintraub, Susan D.; Haynes, Cliff; Murray, Joseph L.; Marquart, Christopher P. – Journal of College Student Development, 2020
We examined how different types of interactions affect psychological sense of community among students in living-learning programs. Distinctions were drawn among 3 types of interactions--academic, social, and deeper life--in which students engage with faculty, staff, and peers. Accounting for both the type of interaction and the participants, we…
Descriptors: Sense of Community, Living Learning Centers, Learner Engagement, Teacher Student Relationship
Yukhymenko-Lescroart, Mariya; Sharma, Gitima; Stephens, Jason M. – Journal of College Student Development, 2022
Academic misconduct has been conceptualized as students' engagement in various types of proscribed behaviors, such as plagiarism and cheating on assignments and tests or exams (e.g., Stephens et al., 2021). While most of the current literature on academic misconduct has focused on developed countries, the problem is rampant across the world (Krou…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Cheating, Mexicans, Foreign Countries
York, Travis T.; Fernandez, Frank – Journal of College Student Development, 2018
More than 1 in 3 undergraduate students transfers from one college or university to another, but many do not go on to graduate. Literature suggests that service-learning pedagogy supports both social and academic integration; therefore, we examined whether transfer students' participation in service-learning courses is related to sense of…
Descriptors: Service Learning, Transfer Students, Sense of Community, Undergraduate Students
Garton, Paul M.; Wawrzynski, Matthew R. – Journal of College Student Development, 2021
Student affairs and student engagement are becoming important mechanisms for social change within South African tertiary education. We explored the relationship between student involvement in cocurricular activities and learning outcomes related to collective leadership for social change. Data were collected via a survey of 1,309 students that…
Descriptors: Social Change, Student Personnel Services, Learner Engagement, Higher Education
Rose, Emily; Sriram, Risi – Journal of College Student Development, 2016
Leaders of higher education value student engagement because of its measured effects on student outcomes such as retention and academic success. To increase engagement, institutions implement measures such as livinglearning programs, which combine the residential experience with an academic focus (Arboleda, Wang, Shelley, & Whalen, 2003; Zhao…
Descriptors: College Environment, College Students, Residential Institutions, Higher Education
Lundberg, Carol A.; Kim, Young K.; Andrade, Luis M.; Bahner, Daniel T. – Journal of College Student Development, 2018
In this study we investigated the extent to which faculty interaction contributed to Latina/o student perceptions of their learning, using a sample of 10,071 Latina/o students who took the Community College Survey of Student Engagement. Findings were disaggregated for men and women, but results were quite similar between the 2 groups. Frequent…
Descriptors: Hispanic American Students, Two Year College Students, Learner Engagement, Community Colleges
Cole, James S.; Korkmaz, Ali – Journal of College Student Development, 2013
This study focused on the dispositions of entering first-year students, their perceptions of classroom and institutional environments, and their subsequent academic engagement. Total variance explained by variables included in the path model for academic engagement was 30%. The results of this study found evidence to support the theoretical model…
Descriptors: Well Being, Psychological Patterns, Mental Health, Predictor Variables
Small, Meg L.; Waterman, Emily; Lender, Taylor – Journal of College Student Development, 2017
To increase student engagement, many universities are adopting high-impact educational practices that include study abroad opportunities, faculty mentoring, internships, service learning, challenging coursework, and research experiences; these institutions are also intentionally promoting high-impact cocurricular activities such as community…
Descriptors: Learner Engagement, Time Management, College Freshmen, Predictor Variables
Collins, Timothy W.; Grineski, Sara E.; Shenberger, Jessica; Morales, Xiaodan; Morera, Osvaldo F.; Echegoyen, Lourdes E. – Journal of College Student Development, 2017
Few scholars have comprehensively examined benefits of undergraduate research (UGR) participation for students at an institution campus-wide. In this study we examined benefits of UGR participation at a Hispanic-majority institution using National Survey of Student Engagement data. Generalized estimating equations were used to examine the…
Descriptors: Student Research, Undergraduate Students, Hispanic American Students, Program Effectiveness
Lundberg, Carol A. – Journal of College Student Development, 2014
A national sample of 647 Native American students who took the National Survey of Student Engagement was used to test a path model to predict learning for Native American students. Institutional support for students' success and a positive interpersonal environment contributed both to engagement and learning. Support for student success was the…
Descriptors: American Indian Students, Institutional Characteristics, Interpersonal Relationship, Learning
Lundberg, Carol A.; Lowe, Shelly C. – Journal of College Student Development, 2016
With a national sample of 700 Native American students who took the National Survey of Student Engagement (NSSE), this study tested the ways faculty interaction and inclusion of diverse perspectives in the classroom contributed to learning for Native American students. Significant predictors of learning were quality academic advising, faculty…
Descriptors: American Indian Students, Learner Engagement, Teacher Student Relationship, Interaction
Brint, Steven; Cantwell, Alison M. – Journal of College Student Development, 2014
We theorize 5 dimensions of academic disengagement based on students' values, motivations, study behaviors, academic interactions, and competing involvements. Using 2010 survey data from the University of California, we find support for this conceptualization. The size of disengaged populations varied between 5% and 25%, depending on the measure…
Descriptors: Student Surveys, Undergraduate Students, Measures (Individuals), Student Characteristics
Wang, Xueli; Kennedy-Phillips, Lance – Journal of College Student Development, 2013
Research has long suggested that an optimal level of involvement in academic and social activities positively affects student development and outcomes. However, many second-year students experience the "sophomore slump." For this study, guided by both prior literature and theoretical perspectives, a survey instrument was developed to…
Descriptors: College Students, Student Participation, School Activities, Student Attitudes
Lundberg, Carol A. – Journal of College Student Development, 2012
Using a sample of 2,836 students from 5 different racial/ethnic groups, this study identified the ways student engagement and institutional features predict student learning. A supportive campus environment and high academic challenge predicted learning in general education, personal development, and practical competence for all racial/ethnic…
Descriptors: Learner Engagement, Racial Differences, Ethnicity, Educational Experience
Lundberg, Carol A.; Schreiner, Laurie A. – Journal of College Student Development, 2004
Student engagement with faculty members and its relationship to learning was investigated for students of seven different racial/ethnic groups (N = 4,501), yielding small differences by student race/ethnicity. Relationships with faculty were stronger predictors of learning than student background characteristics for all groups, but strongest for…
Descriptors: Learner Engagement, Ethnic Groups, Race, Interaction