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Hossler, Don | 4 |
Maple, Sue | 2 |
Bateman, Mark | 1 |
Stage, Frances K. | 1 |
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Hossler, Don; Maple, Sue – Review of Higher Education, 1993
A longitudinal study compared Indiana ninth graders (n=178) with and without postsecondary education plans. Results indicate decided and undecided students can be differentiated by the amount of time spent thinking about postsecondary options, amount of information received regarding those options, academic achievement, and student and parent…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, College Choice, Decision Making, Educational Objectives
Hossler, Don; Maple, Sue – 1991
This exploratory study sought to compare the characteristics, attitudes and postsecondary knowledge of two groups of Indiana ninth grade students, those who plan to continue their education after high school and those who indicate that they are undecided about their post secondary plans. The study used data from a longitudinal study of college…
Descriptors: Academic Aspiration, Family Characteristics, Goal Orientation, Grade 9

Hossler, Don; Stage, Frances K. – American Educational Research Journal, 1992
Current literature on status attainment and student college choice is reviewed, and a structural model of predisposition to attend college is presented. Data from 2,497 ninth graders attending 21 high schools in Indiana and their parents, analyzed using LISREL, support the model's usefulness in determining students' college choice. (SLD)
Descriptors: Academic Aspiration, College Bound Students, College Choice, Family Influence

Bateman, Mark; Hossler, Don – College and University, 1996
Compared development of postsecondary education plans of African American and White ninth graders, vs variables of the Hossler/Gallagher Three Phase Model of College Choice. Subjects were from 2,930 households with students attending 21 Indiana high schools. Results indicate the variables were more predictive for Whites than African Americans, and…
Descriptors: Black Students, College Administration, College Bound Students, College Choice