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Davis, Joe L.; Caldwell, Steve – Journal of College Student Personnel, 1977
A study regarding student attitudes at a residential campus was partially replicated at a commuter campus. The hypothesis tested was that student attitudes would be unrelated to commuter or residential status. Commuter students typically had a more positive response to their educational experience than did residential students. (Author)
Descriptors: College Students, Commuting Students, Comparative Analysis, Educational Experience
Call, Richard W. – 1974
To determine whether the scholastic averages of resident students at York College, Pennsylvania are significantly different from those of commuting students, 200 resident students were compared with 200 commuting students. The groups were randomly selected and matched in terms of sex, college class, marital status, and intelligence. Scholastic…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, College Students, Community Colleges, Commuting Students
Bukowski, Joseph E. – 1975
Focusing on freshmen commuter students and freshmen dormitory students at Johnson and Wales College, general characteristics and academic achievement were measured. General entrance characteristics included student age, College Entrance Examination Board scores and high school rank. Academic achievement was measured in terms of student grades in…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Age, Business Education, College Environment
Reichard, Donald J.; McArver, Patricia P. – 1975
Commuting students make up sixty-two percent of the fall 1975 student body and represent the principal source of enrollment growth at UNC-G. The Office of Institutional Research conducted a survey of 2,140 commuter and resident students in the spring of 1975. A stratified random sample was designed so that students in the different undergraduate…
Descriptors: Commuting Students, Comparative Analysis, Demography, Females
Reichard, Donald J.; McArver, Patricia P. – 1975
The commuting university student has traditionally been characterized in educational literature as less affluent, intellectually less sophisticated and more closely tied to home and family than his peer who lives in university housing. Such generalizations, while historically accurate, do not take into account factors that are bringing older,…
Descriptors: Commuting Students, Comparative Analysis, Demography, Females
Foster, Margaret E.; And Others – 1975
The following questions are investigated: Are there identifiable dimensions along which resident and commuter students systematically differ? If there are differences, will the commuting student appear to be educationally, socially, and attitudinally disadvantaged as suggested by several studies? Can subgroups of commuters be defined with…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Commuting Students, Comparative Analysis, Higher Education
Suchar, Elizabeth W.; And Others – 1977
A listing is given of student expenses at approximately 2,750 postsecondary institutions across the United States as reported by the institutions. Eighteen tables give data indicating average expenses for commuting students, self-supporting students, and resident students, both those living in campus housing and those in private housing. The…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Commuting Students, Comparative Analysis, Expenditure per Student