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Terenzini, Patrick T.; Pascarella, Ernest T. – The Review of Higher Education, 1984
The relation between residence arrrangement and college attendance patterns was studied. The degree to which the nature of the group with whom a freshman college student lives may influence that student's decision to continue enrollment into the sophomore year was assessed. (MLW)
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Commuting Students, Dropout Research, Females
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Flanagan, Constance; And Others – Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 1993
The relationships between residential setting (home or away) and gender and the perceptions of late adolescents of their relationships with their parents were studied for 404 undergraduates. Living away is associated with greater independence, support, and mutual respect between students and parents. Women report more mutuality and support than do…
Descriptors: Commuting Students, Females, Higher Education, Males
Reichard, Donald J.; McArver, Patricia P. – 1975
Commuting students make up sixty-two percent of the fall 1975 student body and represent the principal source of enrollment growth at UNC-G. The Office of Institutional Research conducted a survey of 2,140 commuter and resident students in the spring of 1975. A stratified random sample was designed so that students in the different undergraduate…
Descriptors: Commuting Students, Comparative Analysis, Demography, Females
Reichard, Donald J.; McArver, Patricia P. – 1975
The commuting university student has traditionally been characterized in educational literature as less affluent, intellectually less sophisticated and more closely tied to home and family than his peer who lives in university housing. Such generalizations, while historically accurate, do not take into account factors that are bringing older,…
Descriptors: Commuting Students, Comparative Analysis, Demography, Females
Hoelcle, Larene Nichols – 1975
Those who design educational policy, as well as those who plan to go to college, need to know what societal benefits derive from higher education, for whom the college experience is effective, and what aspects of the experience are valuable to what students. To investigate such concerns, a study was initiated in 1964: (1) to describe to faculty,…
Descriptors: Commuting Students, Degrees (Academic), Educational Benefits, Educational Experience
Bare, Alan C. – 1983
Student satisfaction with the environments of five commuter colleges was studied at an eastern university. A reliable instrument was developed to profile 2,392 students' perceptions of 30 aspects of the college environment. To determine how student characteristics relate to their evaluations of the college environment, eight regression analyses…
Descriptors: Ancillary School Services, Black Students, College Environment, Commuter Colleges
Feler, Raquel W.; Taylor, William T. – 1978
The student profile consists of numerical data with some analysis, derived from an institution-wide study of student characteristics that may bear upon planning processes, especially for racial and ethnic groups. The data include demographic characteristics (race, sex, age, geographic origin, and resident status), maturational characteristics…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Admission Criteria, Age, College Applicants
Badger, Henry G.; Kelly, Frederick J.; McNeely, John H. – US Office of Education, Federal Security Agency, 1941
For the statistical compilations found in the following pages the data were gathered by means of two questionnaires--one on faculty, students, and degrees; and the other on receipts, expenditures, and property. These questionnaires were sent to all of the 1,709 institutions listed in Office of Education Bulletin 1939, No. 1, "Educational…
Descriptors: Educational History, Statistical Surveys, National Surveys, School Statistics