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Peer reviewedTimberlake, Constance – High School Journal, 1983
Investigated attitude differences between Black female secondary students identified as potential dropouts who persisted and earned a diploma and those identified as potential dropouts who did drop out without earning a diploma. Results are provided for attitudes related to teachers, peers, school work, and school in general. (JN)
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, Blacks, Dropout Research, Dropouts
Peer reviewedSchmidt, Wesley I.; Dykeman, Bruce F. – Education, 1979
Using a randomized two group pre-test/post-test research design, the study found that (1) significant results occurred on those variables measuring levels of vocational maturity, days of school attendance, and numbers of disciplinary referrals and (2) non-significant results occurred on those variables measuring proportions of students dropping…
Descriptors: Career Education, Dropout Prevention, Potential Dropouts, Program Effectiveness
Peer reviewedPena, Jesus J.; And Others – Urban Review, 1979
Describes the Youth Opportunity Program at the Central Islip, New York, Psychiatric Center and evaluates its effectiveness in preventing school dropout and providing career training. (ST)
Descriptors: Career Education, Dropout Prevention, Dropouts, Employment Programs
Vail, Kathleen – American School Board Journal, 1998
While others form committees, do research, and write legislation to address the appalling Hispanic dropout problem, Joe Sandoval, principal of Denver's North High School, performs search-and-rescue missions to reclaim missing students. Recognizing economic realities, he and his staff visit students' homes with offers of academic help, flexible…
Descriptors: Dropout Programs, Dropout Rate, Helping Relationship, High Schools
Peer reviewedEllenbogen, Stephen; Chamberland, Claire – Journal of Adolescence, 1997
Compared the characteristics of friends, the environments of the friendship network, and the nature of peer relations of students (N=191) at-risk and not at risk of leaving high school. Results indicate that at risk students had more dropout friends, more working friends, fewer school friends, and fewer same-sex friends. (RJM)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Comparative Analysis, Dropout Research, Dropouts
Scott, Charles L. – American School Board Journal, 1989
Dayton (Ohio) Public Schools have two new programs for potential dropouts, called University Prep Program and New Options for Work, that take the students out of classes with younger students and treat them as the young adults they are. (MLF)
Descriptors: College School Cooperation, Dropout Prevention, Graduation, High Risk Students
Peer reviewedHamby, John V. – Educational Leadership, 1989
A coordinated effort by all segments of society, led by the schools, can decrease the number of dropouts, increasing the chances that more young people will lead productive lives. Included is a list of sources of dropout prevention activities. (TE)
Descriptors: Academic Failure, Dropout Prevention, Educational Economics, Educational Environment
Peer reviewedPersaud, Dushyanta; Madak, Paul R. – Alberta Journal of Educational Research, 1992
Surveyed 92 students about to graduate from 3 Winnipeg high schools and 38 dropouts. Results revealed that graduates perceived themselves as being smarter, more ambitious and responsible, more involved in church and volunteer work, less involved with drugs and alcohol, and less involved in criminal activities than dropouts. (Author/KS)
Descriptors: Dropout Characteristics, Dropouts, Family Characteristics, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedBackes, John S. – Journal of American Indian Education, 1993
The Gregorc Style Delineator was administered to 358 graduates and dropouts from 2 matched, racially homogeneous white and Chippewa high schools in Minnesota. Dominant learning styles were abstract random for all Chippewa subjects and concrete sequential for all whites. No significant differences were found between Chippewa graduates and dropouts.…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, American Indians, Cognitive Style, Dropout Characteristics
Peer reviewedAddis, Sandy – Journal of School Leadership, 1991
Experiences from dropout programs that serve at-risk students at a North Carolina school district identify planning and management considerations. Among these are that dropout rates and other measures of success must be standardized; and staff selection, duty assignments, and workloads are different for at-risk educators because of inordinate time…
Descriptors: Dropout Prevention, Dropout Programs, Elementary Secondary Education, High Risk Students
Peer reviewedWalker, Lynn – International Journal of Lifelong Education, 1999
A two-year study of 57 nontraditional disadvantaged students in a preuniversity summer school found that success could not be predicted by family and educational background. Dropouts were less motivated and less suited to academic work and had poorer attitudes, whereas persisters were highly motivated and integrated into the institution. (SK)
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, Disadvantaged, Dropout Research, Dropouts
Kaufman, Phillip; Klein, Steve; Frase, Mary – Education Statistics Quarterly, 1999
Presents data on high school dropout in 1997, the year for which the most recent data are available, and includes time-series data on high school dropout and completion for the period 1972 through 1997. Examines the characteristics of dropouts and high school completers in 1997. (SLD)
Descriptors: Dropout Rate, Dropout Research, Educational Trends, High School Graduates
Peer reviewedBivin, David; Rooney, Patrick Michael – Research in Higher Education, 1999
This study used Tobit analysis to estimate retention probabilities and credit hours at two universities. Tobit was judged as appropriate for this problem because it recognizes the lower bound of zero on credit hours and incorporates this bound into parameter estimates and forecasts. Models are estimated for credit hours in a single year and…
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, College Credits, Dropout Research, Dropouts
Peer reviewedYorke, Mantz – Quality in Higher Education, 2000
Surveys of students who had prematurely left six institutions of higher education in England during 1994-1996 generated 2,151 responses. Six main factors, led by dissatisfaction with the quality of the student experience, contributed to their non-completion. Other factors included wrong choice of field of study, age, gender, and academic subject…
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, Decision Making, Dropout Research, Dropouts
Peer reviewedWorrell, Frank C. – Journal of At-Risk Issues, 1997
Examined differences between academically talented female high school students who were not at risk (n=24) , and similar resilient at-risk students (n=17) on individual and environmental risk and protective factors. Hypotheses that the two groups would differ on risk factors, but not protective factors, were generally supported, suggesting a…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Dropout Prevention, Dropouts, Females


