NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Laws, Policies, & Programs
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Showing 16 to 30 of 32 results Save | Export
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Minkevich, George; And Others – College Student Journal, 1972
Significant differences in this study were found an the Deference and Affiliation scales of the EPPS. Similarities were not accounted for by sex or socioeconomic variables. (BY)
Descriptors: College Students, Commuter Colleges, Commuting Students, Individual Characteristics
Bentz, Robert P.; And Others – 1975
The commuter institute is one to which students commute. The two basic assumptions of this study are: (1) the Chicago Circle campus of the University of Illinois will remain a commuter institution during the decade ahead; and (2) the campus will increasingly serve a more heterogeneous student body. These assumptions have important implications for…
Descriptors: Commuter Colleges, Commuting Students, Delivery Systems, Development
Preston, C. Thomas, Jr. – 1991
Few challenges involved in forensics coaching are as challenging as finding and maintaining qualified students in the program. Urban commuter colleges possess unique opportunities for developing broad-based, diverse forensics programs. The University of Missouri-St. Louis (UM-St. Louis) provides an example of how directors might take advantage of…
Descriptors: College School Cooperation, Commuter Colleges, Cultural Pluralism, Debate
Creamer, Don G. – 1984
A conceptual view of student development and the milieu of an urban commuter college are discussed. Student development is defined as the application of human development theory, principles, and concepts in an educational setting to identify the forms of development in students to which the institution is willing and able to commit its resources.…
Descriptors: College Environment, Commuter Colleges, Higher Education, Individual Development
Gusfield, Joseph; and others – J Higher Educ, 1970
Points out that almost all our colleges and universities were founded in rural areas and reflected the dominant political interests and social mores. These influences are still strong, but certain changes reflect the increasing dominance of urban life. Some of these changes and the effects they will have upon our institutions are discussed. (AD)
Descriptors: Commuter Colleges, Educational Demand, Enrollment Influences, Higher Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Grobman, Arnold B. – Liberal Education, 1980
The many different kinds of urban institutions are identified and the state of higher education in urban areas is discussed. The effect of the land-grant colleges movement is described. Three guiding philosophies during the present century about American education are identified: colleges as aristocratic institutions, meritocracy, and…
Descriptors: College Role, Commuter Colleges, Educational History, Higher Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Pascarella, Ernest T.; And Others – Research in Higher Education, 1981
Multiple group discriminant analysis was employed to determine the utility of preenrollment traits and academic performance in identifying freshman students who persisted, stopped out, or withdrew early. After first-quarter academic performance, relatively clear distinctions can be made between students who persist and those who do not.…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Persistence, College Freshmen, Commuter Colleges
Avakian, A. Nancy; And Others – 1984
The retention of five cohorts of first-time freshmen and transfer students who reenrolled for 8 years in a nonresidential urban institution was investigated. Attention was directed to the effects of sex, race, and grade point average on retention, differences in retention for first-time freshmen and transfer students, and the extent to which…
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, College Freshmen, College Transfer Students, Commuter Colleges
Borden, Victor M. H.; Gentemann, Karen – 1993
A student survey at a metropolitan university examined priorities of both traditional and non-traditional students; the survey resulted from anxieties expressed by some students about not having a traditional college experience. The administration was trying to decide whether to allocate resources to create a football program within this commuter,…
Descriptors: College Students, Community Satisfaction, Commuter Colleges, Educational Environment
Allard, M. June – 1985
Institutional bonding was examined at a public, urban commuter college with exceptionally high attrition and visibly low morale. Changes in bonding and attrition were measured 6 years after a 2-year effort to develop school identity and student feelings of membership. It was found that a simple index of campus morale is provided by level of…
Descriptors: Attachment Behavior, Commuter Colleges, Family Influence, Friendship
Langer, Peter; And Others – 1987
Retention at the University of Massachusetts, Boston, was studied, based on the entire population of 29,372 undergraduate degree-seeking students enrolled in a semester between fall 1981 and 1987. Two measures of the retention rate are used: cohort survival, the percentage of the original cohort of entering students that is enrolled in or has…
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, College Freshmen, College Students, College Transfer Students
Broughton, Valerie J. – 1986
The relationship between community college transfer students' experiences at an urban, doctoral-granting commuter university and their enrollment intentions was studied using Bean and Metzner's conceptual model of attrition for nontraditional students. Of 300 community college transfer students at a state-supported urban university who were…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Aspiration, College Transfer Students, Commuter Colleges
Cross, Dolores E. – 1992
This speech describes Chicago State University's (CSU) model for encouraging student retention and success and the organizational changes that were necessary to implement the model during a period of fiscal constraints. A description of the institution and its context notes that CSU is a comprehensive, urban, commuter university serving a…
Descriptors: College Graduates, Commuter Colleges, Dropout Rate, Faculty College Relationship
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Metzner, Barbara S.; Bean, John P. – Research in Higher Education, 1987
Data were gathered from nontraditional (commuter, part-time) freshmen at a midwestern urban university. Dropout was a function of grade point average and credit hours enrolled, as well as the utility of education for future employment, satisfaction with the student role, opportunity to transfer, and age affecting dropout through intent to leave.…
Descriptors: Adult Students, College Students, Commuter Colleges, Commuting Students
Greene, James E.; And Others – 1982
Factors contributing to the academic persistence of college students and those factors that may be amenable to institutional control were studied in 1980 at Georgia State University. The academic career of 4,481 students was studied for a 5-quarter period at this nonresidential, urban university. Multiple regression and multiple discriminant…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Persistence, College Students, Commuter Colleges
Pages: 1  |  2  |  3