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Journal of Higher Education | 7 |
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Cabrera, Alberto F.; And Others – Journal of Higher Education, 1992
Two theories concerning students' decisions to leave college are compared, and the convergence and discriminant validity of the two theories are examined empirically. The extent to which the theories could be merged to help researchers understand the role of institutional and noninstitutional variables in student persistence is discussed. (MSE)
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, College Administration, College Students, Comparative Analysis

Jensen, Eric L. – Journal of Higher Education, 1981
In general, students receiving financial aid in their freshman year show greater academic persistence than nonreceivers, but increasing amounts of aid per semester have nonsignificant negative impacts on the number of semesters attended in a four-year period. Persistence may be hampered by increasing loan burdens on students. (MSE)
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, College Freshmen, College Students, Comparative Analysis

Pascarella, Ernest T.; Terenzini, Patrick T. – Journal of Higher Education, 1980
A five-scale instrument developed from a theoretical model of college attrition correctly identified the persistence/voluntary withdrawal decisions of 78.5 percent of 773 freshmen in a large, residential university. Findings showed that student relationships with faculty were particularly important. (Author/PHR)
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Dropouts, Educational Research, Higher Education

DesJardins, Stephen L.; Ahlburg, Dennis A.; McCall, Brian P. – Journal of Higher Education, 2002
Asserting that graduation and stopout are "competing" or correlated events and that they often should be modeled as such, this study demonstrated that factors affecting timely graduation (e.g., financial aid) often have time-varying effects, and that ignoring these time-varying effects can lead to spurious conclusions that may result in…
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, College Graduates, Dropout Research, Dropouts

Tierney, William – Journal of Higher Education, 1992
The widely accepted theory that college participation is a "rite of passage," where academic and social integration is required for student persistence, is criticized as misinterpreting anthropological notions of ritual and holding consequences harmful for racial and ethnic minorities. An approach focusing on emancipation and empowerment is…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Persistence, Anthropology, College Students

Pascarella, Ernest T.; And Others – Journal of Higher Education, 1986
The influence of an intensive two-day orientation to college on freshman voluntary persistence and withdrawal decisions was estimated with an explanatory causal model. Results suggest the major influence of orientation on persistence is indirect, transmitted through positive effects on student social integration and commitment to the institution.…
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, Adjustment (to Environment), Attitude Change, College Freshmen

Good, Carter V. – Journal of Higher Education, 1999
Reviews research on teacher education, focusing on studies of the relationship between student achievement and high school grades, junior college transfers, gender, fraternities/sororities, attendance, student evaluation of faculty, and problems of teaching method in teacher education. (Originally published in 1930) (MSE)
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Attendance Patterns, Dropout Characteristics, Educational History