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Peer reviewedWarner, Lyle B.; Luft, Vernon D. – Journal of the American Association of Teacher Educators in Agriculture, 1982
This research study identifies major reasons that caused students enrolled in two-year postsecondary farm management programs, at five postsecondary institutions in North Dakota, not to complete the prescribed course of study in which they were enrolled. (SSH)
Descriptors: Agricultural Education, Dropout Attitudes, Dropout Characteristics, Farm Management
Peer reviewedHamer, Irving S., Jr. – NASSP Bulletin, 1982
Introduces some possibilities for treating the condition of the misplaced and dislocated adolescent. Reviews the development of street academies as one attempt to address the problems of out-of-school youth. Concludes that systematic efforts are needed to serve an ignored population. (Author/WD)
Descriptors: Dropout Programs, Dropouts, Institutional Cooperation, Out of School Youth
Keim, Marybelle C. – New Directions for Community Colleges, 1981
Discusses attrition research in terms of student characteristics predictive of persistence and reasons students drop out. Itemizes the steps of planning a retention program and suggests retention strategies in three categories: administration, faculty, and student personnel. (DD)
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Dropout Research, Dropouts, Program Development
Peer reviewedDavidson, Charles W.; And Others – Journal of Educational Research, 1979
The best predictor of drug use among secondary school dropouts is the absence of an adult male in the home. (Editor)
Descriptors: Dropout Characteristics, Dropouts, Drug Abuse, Fatherless Family
Peer reviewedGunn, Alexander D. G. – Journal of the American College Health Association, 1976
The role of the university's medical service in lowering first-year, drop-out rates is based on the identification of psychological, environmental, and physical needs of the student. (MB)
Descriptors: College Students, Dropout Characteristics, Dropout Prevention, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedGoldman, Juliette D. G.; Bradley, Graham L. – International Journal of Lifelong Education, 1996
Study of 1,233 Australian dropouts who reentered high school showed that unsuccessful reentrants were often homeless and unemployed, were more likely to be at traditional rather than innovative schools, and had practical, interpersonal, or discipline-related problems at school. Three best predictors of repeat dropout were extent of interpersonal…
Descriptors: Academic Aspiration, Dropout Research, Dropouts, Foreign Countries
Walls, Michael W. – Executive Educator, 1990
A Delaware school district developed partnerships with local businesses that helped lower the dropout rate by 32 percent. Students who meet some minimum qualifications are selected, and local businesses provide entry-level jobs, mentors, and the promise of jobs after the students graduate. (MLF)
Descriptors: Career Exploration, Dropout Prevention, High Risk Students, High Schools
Peer reviewedCray-Andrews, Martha – Preventing School Failure, 1989
Academic failure must be seen as a failure by school and student together. By discarding faith in the "average needs" of the "average child" and instead accepting diversity in learning styles (both abstract and concrete, sequential and random), teachers can approach school failure from a problem-solving perspective. (PB)
Descriptors: Academic Failure, Cognitive Style, Dropout Prevention, Dropouts
Peer reviewedSarkees, Michelle D. – Journal for Vocational Special Needs Education, 1989
Involving parents in a team approach by providing parent education and assistance programs can only strengthen dropout prevention strategies that are being developed and implemented throughout the nation. (JOW)
Descriptors: Career Development, Dropout Prevention, Dropout Programs, High Risk Students
Peer reviewedFriedenberg, Joan E. – Journal of Industrial Teacher Education, 1999
Disadvantaged Mexican dropouts aged 16-22 (n=25) and 25 Hispanic elementary students completed dropout-prediction instruments. Elementary students were unable to consider their future and self-report was not viable for them. Among dropouts, pregnancy and moving around were salient predictors. Modifications of the instruments were recommended. (SK)
Descriptors: Children, Disadvantaged, Dropout Research, Hispanic Americans
Peer reviewedObot, Isidore Silas; Anthony, James C. – Journal of Drug Education, 2000
Extends previous findings on association between school dropout and injecting drug use among African Americans by testing the association with a sample of White non-Hispanic Americans. Results determined that White non-Hispanic American high school dropouts were more likely to have injected a drug at least once. Dropout prevention programs may…
Descriptors: Blacks, Dropout Research, Dropouts, High School Students
Peer reviewedJimerson, Shane R.; Anderson, Gabrielle E.; Whipple, Angela D. – Psychology in the Schools, 2002
A review of studies examining dropping out of high school prior to graduation demonstrates that grade retention is one of the most powerful predictors of dropout status. Addresses the discrepancies regarding the effectiveness of grade retention and deleterious long-term correlates. Presents the transactional model of development, which emphasizes…
Descriptors: Dropout Characteristics, Dropout Research, Grade Repetition, High School Students
Peer reviewedMatthews, Andy; Swan, William W. – Journal of At-Risk Issues, 1999
Longitudinally examined the effects of two linked at-risk programs (a middle school dropout prevention program and a high school transition program), focusing on attendance, promotion/retention, courses passed, discipline referrals, suspensions, sequence of services, the effects of passage of time following the intervention, and dropping out.…
Descriptors: Dropout Prevention, Dropout Programs, High Risk Students, Middle Schools
Bost, Loujeania Williams; Riccomini, Paul J. – Remedial and Special Education, 2006
Although researchers have clearly connected dropping out of school to prolonged low achievement, to date, effective teaching practices are largely absent from the milieu of interventions and programs that are employed by schools to address dropout prevention. As such, effective instructional design and delivery as a focus for keeping students with…
Descriptors: Low Achievement, Teaching Methods, Researchers, Dropouts
Roblyer, M. D. – Phi Delta Kappan, 2006
Although dropout rates in virtual school courses are typically quite high, some virtual programs have very low course dropout and failure rates and better passing rates on key criterion tests (e.g., AP tests) than do traditional school programs. Directors of five successful virtual schools agreed to share their "formulas for success" in…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Dropouts, Dropout Rate, Traditional Schools

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