January 8, 2016 Enhancing Student Retention: Impacts of a First-Year Seminar Course Dixie Watts...

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July 4, 2022 Enhancing Student Retention: Impacts of a First- Year Seminar Course Dixie Watts Dalton and Mary A. Marchant NACTA Conference Dept. of Agricultural and Applied Economics Penn State Virginia Tech June 2010

Transcript of January 8, 2016 Enhancing Student Retention: Impacts of a First-Year Seminar Course Dixie Watts...

Page 1: January 8, 2016 Enhancing Student Retention: Impacts of a First-Year Seminar Course Dixie Watts Dalton and Mary A. Marchant NACTA Conference Dept. of Agricultural.

April 21, 2023

Enhancing Student Retention: Impacts of a First-Year Seminar Course

Enhancing Student Retention: Impacts of a First-Year Seminar Course

Dixie Watts Dalton and Mary A. Marchant NACTA Conference

Dept. of Agricultural and Applied Economics Penn State

Virginia Tech June 2010

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Today’s PresentationToday’s Presentation

• Introduction

• Data methods

• Results

• Conclusions

• Questions and discussion

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IntroductionIntroduction• Student retention and graduation are

important outcomes for undergraduate programs

• President Obama’s stated goal: “By 2020, America will again have the highest proportion of college graduates in the world.”

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Introduction (cont’d)Introduction (cont’d)

• A sense of “connectedness” can improve retention (Tinto)

• “Lack of attention” is a source of the problem of “too low” graduation rates (Bowen, et al.)

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Motivation for Virginia Tech’s AAEC

First Year Seminar

Motivation for Virginia Tech’s AAEC

First Year Seminar• Senior exit interviews indicated that students

wished they had met more faculty earlier

• There was a lack of departmental connection with students until the junior year • freshman courses were large and impersonal • few AAEC courses were taken as sophomores

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The SolutionThe Solution

In 1998, the department created a one-credit First Year Seminar for all entering freshmen and external transfer students

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AAEC First Year Seminar (FYS)AAEC First Year Seminar (FYS) Three primary goals:

• To assist students in transitioning to a four-year university while creating a sense of community

• To introduce students to the breadth and depth of AAEC discipline

• To provide a forum for meeting faculty and learning of teaching/research/ outreach interests

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Data methods: Quantitative Analysis of SurveyData methods: Quantitative Analysis of Survey

Conducted alumni survey to determine benefits of FYS course• Emailed through Alumni Association, with

one electronic reminder• Likert-scale questions on usefulness• 20% response rate

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Data methods: Quantitative Analysis of University DataData methods: Quantitative Analysis of University Data Utilizing data from Virginia Tech’s

Institutional Research Division (IRD)• Compared retention and graduation rates,

pre- and post-seminar course• Compared post-seminar rates for AAEC,

college, and university

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Results: Alumni SurveyResults: Alumni Survey Survey question and percent of respondents

indicating “somewhat” or “very helpful”:

Assisting with adjustment to college life 83

Learning about AAEC discipline 91

Learning of faculty teaching/research/extension work 87

Meeting VT AAEC faculty 100

Connecting with fellow AAEC majors 100

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Results: IRD Pre- & Post-FYS Retention & Graduation RatesResults: IRD Pre- & Post-FYS Retention & Graduation Rates

Following implementation of the First Year Seminar, retention (freshman to sophomore) and graduation (4- and 5-year) rates improved

Continued to 2nd Year

Graduated in 4 years

Graduated in 5 years

Pre-seminar 77.6 44.9 58.2

Post-seminar 82.9 61.8 70.1

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Results: IRD Dept. vs. College and University Rates Results: IRD Dept. vs. College and University Rates

Post-FYS, departmental retention and graduation rates exceeded those of the college and exceeded 4-year graduation rates for the university overall

Continued to 2nd Year

Graduated in 4 years

Graduated in 5 years

AAEC 83.2 62.1 69.4

CALS 77.4 49.0 58.0

VT 88.9 52.0 75.0

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ConclusionsConclusions• Student retention is an important issue for

higher education

• Creating connectedness makes a difference

• A first year seminar course creates connectedness and improves retention and graduation rates

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April 21, 2023

Working Paper:http://purl.umn.edu/56476Working Paper:http://purl.umn.edu/56476

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ReferencesReferences• Bowen, W.G., M.M. Chingos, and M.S. McPherson (2009).

Crossing the Finish Line: Completing College at America’s Public Universities, Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press.

• Obama, B. (2009). “Remarks of President Barack Obama – Address to Joint Session of Congress.” Text of a speech released by the White House Press Office, February 24, 2009.

• Tinto, V. (1993). Leaving College: Rethinking the Causes and Cures of Student Attrition (2nd ed.). Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Page 16: January 8, 2016 Enhancing Student Retention: Impacts of a First-Year Seminar Course Dixie Watts Dalton and Mary A. Marchant NACTA Conference Dept. of Agricultural.

April 21, 2023

Enhancing Student Retention: Impacts of a First-Year Seminar Course

Dixie Watts Dalton and Mary A. Marchant NACTA Conference

Dept. of Agricultural and Applied Economics Penn State

Virginia Tech June 2010