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McCreight, Carolyn – 2000
This paper examines research on teacher shortages, attrition, recruitment, and retention. Teacher attrition is the largest single factor determining demand for additional teachers in the United States. Teachers leave for such reasons as: low salaries; unprepared for the realities of teaching; rigorous certification examinations; lack of career…
Descriptors: Beginning Teacher Induction, Beginning Teachers, Elementary Secondary Education, Faculty Mobility
Faupel, Elizabeth; Bobbitt, Sharon; Friedrichs, Kathryn – National Center for Education Statistics, 1992
The National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) sponsored the 1988-89 Teacher Followup Survey (TFS), conducted by the U.S. Bureau of the Census, to update data on teacher career patterns and plans. This survey is a followup of the 1987-88 Schools and Staffing Survey (SASS) teacher sample. Data from previous surveys have been used by Congress,…
Descriptors: Teacher Surveys, Followup Studies, Public School Teachers, Private Schools
Peer reviewedCollings, John; Smithers, Alan – Research in Science and Technological Education, 1983
Investigated male/female sixth-formers studying physical and biological science A-level courses, examining cognitive style, convergent/divergent thinking, career plans, and other characteristics. Differences between biology/physics students tend to be of the same kind as those between scientists as a whole compared to nonscientists. (JN)
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, Biological Sciences, Cognitive Style, Convergent Thinking
Peer reviewedIwai, Stanley I.; Churchill, William D. – Research in Higher Education, 1982
Five groups of undergraduate students (academic dismissals, low grade point average [GPA] stopouts, high GPA stopouts, low GPA persisters, and high GPA persisters) were compared in terms of their responses to a checklist of financial sources of support. Clear sex differences were observed in the reliance on financial sources. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, College Students, Comparative Analysis, Dropout Research
Young, Herman A.; McAnulty, Brenda Hart – Engineering Education, 1981
Reports results of a survey of 149 undergraduates (persisters - 73 White, 9 Black) and former undergraduates (nonpersisters - 35 White, 32 Black) indicating how their perceptions of their college environment affected the decision to remain at or leave the Speed Scientific School, University of Louisville. (SK)
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, Black Students, College Science, Comparative Analysis
Sewart, David – Teaching at a Distance, 1981
Distance teaching is defined. Education is seen as a learning process on the part of the student rather than an instructional process of the teacher. The use of a study center is seen as a stepping stone from traditional group learning to nontraditional individual or group learning. (MLW)
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, Access to Education, Autoinstructional Aids, Correspondence Study
Dallet, Patrick; Opper, John H. – New Directions for Community Colleges, 1997
Describes the Improving Access Through Technology (IATT) project conducted by the Florida Postsecondary Planning Commission which attempts to use technology to increase student access to courses, thereby decreasing time to degree. Identifies student difficulty with math and science courses as a primary cause of lengthening time to degree. (JDI)
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, Access to Education, Associate Degrees, College Mathematics
PDF pending restorationSomers, Patricia – Journal of Student Financial Aid, 1995
An institutional model to measure effect of student financial aid on matriculation and persistence was found to be both workable and potentially useful for college planning. It examines first-time attendance, within-year persistence, and year-to-year persistence of the entering class at an urban, public university, factoring in student background,…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Persistence, College Freshmen, College Planning
Peer reviewedHemmings, Brian; And Others – Journal of Research and Development in Education, 1996
This study examined why Australian high school students decided to continue or discontinue their schooling, using a comprehensive theoretical model to examine the issue. Three surveys of 817 tenth-grade students over a 13-month period indicated that the theoretical model adequately and appropriately explained and predicted students' persistence…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Persistence, Decision Making, Dropout Research
Peer reviewedGlennen, Robert E.; And Others – NACADA Journal, 1996
An approach to fiscal accountability used at Emporia State University (Kansas) demonstrates how a student academic advising center can improve fiscal stability by increasing retention and graduation rates, thereby increasing enrollment-based appropriations. The method links retention and graduation figures and trends for each year and trends in…
Descriptors: Academic Advising, Academic Persistence, Accountability, Dropout Prevention
Peer reviewedChandler, Michael J.; Lalonde, Christopher E.; Sokol, Bryan W.; Hallett, Darcy – Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development, 2003
Five studies examined personal continuity among Native and non-Native North American adolescents. Demonstrated that reasoning about personal persistence proceeds in an orderly and increasingly sophisticated manner over identity development. Failures to warrant self-continuity were strongly associated with increased suicide risk. Efforts to…
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Adolescents, American Indian Culture, American Indian Students
Peer reviewedMenter, Ian – Scottish Educational Review, 2002
Teacher supply and recruitment, teacher pay and working conditions, institutional structures, and policy contexts are compared for England and Scotland. In Scotland, the fundamental approach to teacher employment and retention is based on rewarding teachers and improving conditions. The exaggerated centralization of English education policy, with…
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Educational Policy, Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedYoung, Martha W. – Action in Teacher Education, 1990
Ten secondary teachers, enrolled in an induction program, participated in a year-long study to identify characteristics that can be viewed as important predictors of those teachers who will succeed and those who will not. Findings suggest that intellectual/academic achievement alone is not a sufficient primary predictor of teacher success. (IAH)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, At Risk Persons, Beginning Teacher Induction, Comparative Analysis
Peer reviewedRendon, Laura I.; Nora, Amaury – Community College Review, 1989
Reviews recent research on retention and achievement among Hispanic community college students, focusing on influences on persistence, transfer rates, and financial aid. Identifies needs for additional research, curricular reforms, and retention programs stressing counseling and advisement to promote the development of clear, concrete and…
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, College Transfer Students, Community Colleges, Dropout Prevention
Peer reviewedDawkins, Marvin P. – Journal of Negro Education, 1989
Proposes a model of the vocational aspiration process and applies it to a national sample of Black high school seniors. Overall results highlight the importance of ability, educational plans, and family influence in determining the long-term commitment of Blacks to the pursuit of professional careers. (FMW)
Descriptors: Academic Aptitude, Adolescents, Black Family, Black Youth

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