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Schwitzer, Alan M.; And Others – Journal of College Student Development, 1991
Evaluated outcomes of freshman orientation seminar on orientation to college. Found college freshmen's (n=113) participation was associated with improved academic and social adjustment, in contrast to normal trend of declining adjustment over first semester. Seminar seemed successful at increasing participants' knowledge of university and…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), College Freshmen, Counseling Effectiveness, First Year Seminars
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Brown, Davina M.; Christiansen, Kenneth E. – Journal of the Freshman Year Experience, 1990
Freshman seminar instructors need training for identifying the frequency, severity, and other aspects of grief emotions in relation to real or perceived loss as expressed by first-semester freshmen. Psychological studies of grief suggest ways instructors can assist students in coping successfully with loss and sadness. (Author/MSE)
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Emotional Adjustment, First Year Seminars, Grief
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Starke, Mary C.; Harth, Marshall; Sirianni, Frank – Journal of the First-Year Experience & Students in Transition, 2001
Followed the progress of eight cohorts of first-year college students taking an orientation course between 1986 and 1993. Found that, compared to students who did not take the course, they fared significantly better in retention, graduation rate, grade point average, and other satisfaction, participation, and skills measures. (EV)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Persistence, College Attendance, College Freshmen
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Brent, Doug – College Composition and Communication, 2005
Academically oriented first-year seminars can be good venues for teaching many of the concepts important to WAC programs, including extended engagement with a research topic and situated writing. A qualitative study of a first-year seminar program at the University of Calgary highlights faculty members' and students' responses.
Descriptors: Writing Across the Curriculum, First Year Seminars, Writing Instruction, College Students
South Carolina Univ., Columbia. Center for the Study of the Freshman Year Experience. – 1995
This volume contains a compilation of 68 abstracts by presenters from various nations at a 5-day conference on the first year college student experience. Among the topics considered were: advising and assessment programs; preparing freshmen for work, family, and private life; integrating reentry women in the college community; evaluating…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Educational Experience, First Year Seminars, Foreign Countries
Brown, Daniel – 2003
To determine the different perspectives of faculty members and peer learning facilitators (students) at Eastern New Mexico University about the development of an improved freshman seminar designed to increase retention, a survey was conducted. The instrument required that participants rate the importance of 52 goals to the desired outcomes…
Descriptors: Attitudes, College Faculty, College Outcomes Assessment, College Students
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Mark, Melvin M.; Romano, John J. – Evaluation Review, 1982
A trial program to improve the quality of liberal arts education gave freshmen students at Pennsylvania State University an introduction to a particular discipline, improved advising, and a college orientation. Results suggest that the program led to more favorable attitudes but no perceptible differences in performance or retention. (Author/CM)
Descriptors: Academic Advising, College Freshmen, First Year Seminars, General Education
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Thoroughman, Thomas V. – Liberal Education, 1979
The development of a new humanities program is described. This includes a freshman seminar as an introduction to humanistic study, the modification of traditional language requirements, and the establishment of a writing and reading lab, an issues and values interdisciplinary seminar, and humanities and intercultural majors. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Curriculum Development, Federal Aid, First Year Seminars
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Sommer, Robert – Teaching of Psychology, 1989
Describes the development and content of a freshman seminar titled "The Psychology of Mushrooms," which teaches psychology as natural history. This approach allowed the course to proceed from concrete experience to general principals of perception, learning, social, and abnormal psychology. (Author/LS)
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Course Descriptions, Curriculum Development, Experiential Learning
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Friday, Robert A. – Journal of the Freshman Year Experience, 1989
Task and maintenance roles of group process used in icebreakers prepare students to participate in and learn from group process. Group communication principles applied in the use of icebreakers or group development techniques enhance the instructor's ability to create a learning environment and ensure student participation in a freshman seminar.…
Descriptors: College Faculty, College Freshmen, Faculty Development, First Year Seminars
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Holt, Dennis; Eison, James – Journal of the Freshman Year Experience, 1989
College faculty are placing increasing importance on writing across the curriculum and the use of essay tests. Freshman seminar courses provide an ideal opportunity to teach students to take essay tests successfully. This article describes 10 ways faculty can help students improve their writing skills. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Essay Tests, First Year Seminars, Higher Education
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Raymond, Lanette; Napoli, Anthony R. – Journal of Applied Research in the Community College, 1998
Assesses the correlation between completion of a freshman seminar course at a community college and subsequent persistence and achievement. Indicates that receiving a grade of "C" or better is positively correlated with subsequent academic success. States that the results do not identify which elements of the seminar contributed most to this…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Persistence, College Freshmen, Community Colleges
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Koutsoubakis, Dimitri – Journal of the First-Year Experience & Students in Transition, 1999
This longitudinal study compares academic and social integration and intent to persist of two cohorts of freshmen (total n=132) at the American InterContinental University (England), of whom 70 successfully completed a one-term freshman orientation course and 62 did not take the course. Preliminary results suggest that the course promotes…
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, College Freshmen, First Year Seminars, Foreign Countries
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Cavote, Steven E.; Kopera-Frye, Karen – Journal of The First-Year Experience & Students in Transition, 2004
This study was part of a program evaluation that examined academic performance and retention differences between first-term students who completed a subject-based first-year experience (FYE) course (n = 381) and comparable first-term students (n = 332) who did not enroll in an FYE course. Actual grade point averages and re-enrollment rates across…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Program Evaluation, Grade Point Average, Academic Achievement
Bolender, Ronald – 1994
This study evaluated the stated and real goals of the freshman seminar course at Mount Vernon Nazarene College in Mount Vernon, Ohio. The stated goals for the course, as presented to parents and prospective students, were the enhancement of study skills, strategies for improving grades, and students' overall survival of the college experience,…
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, Church Related Colleges, Educational Objectives, First Year Seminars
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