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Abba Giza – Online Submission, 2021
This paper explores the factors contributing to high dropout rates in U.S. education, particularly in higher education, where 40% of students leave before completing their degrees. It examines causes such as financial difficulties, mental health issues, and lack of engagement, and discusses strategies to reduce dropouts. Key approaches include…
Descriptors: Dropout Rate, Dropout Prevention, College Students, Commuting Students
Lane, Forrest C.; Henson, Robin K. – Online Submission, 2012
School attachment has received considerable attention in K-12 literature but it is relatively unexplored at the post-secondary level. The university attachment scale (UAS) is a new instrument designed to bridge this gap and previous research suggests transfer students score lower on group attachment than non-transfer students. However, these…
Descriptors: Factor Structure, Measures (Individuals), Transfer Students, Learner Engagement
Galardi, Karen M. – Online Submission, 2012
The number of adult graduate students continues to increase in America's higher education institutions. The needs of the adult learner are diverse, and it is a challenge to institutions to meet the needs of this increasing student population. Institutions have responded by offering programs of study both on campus and expanded program offerings at…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Adult Students, Graduate Students, Educational Needs
Magagula, C. M.; Ngwenya, A. P. – Online Submission, 2004
This study examined (1) the profile of the distance and on-campus learners, (2) the academic performance of distance and on-campus learners, (3) the advantages and disadvantages of learning through distance education and on-campus education, and (4) how the disadvantages of learning through distance education could be reduced. The study found that…
Descriptors: Program Effectiveness, Comparative Analysis, Tutors, Library Facilities
O'Hara, Robert J. – Online Submission, 2002
Critics of higher education in the United States have been missing their proper target for many years. It may be true on some large campuses that "tenured radicals" and trendy courses have politicized the curriculum and brought about a local collapse of Western civilization. But it is also true that radical professors have been annoying…
Descriptors: Higher Education, On Campus Students, Colleges, Residential Institutions