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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Knight, William E.
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 1994
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED373644
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author Knight, William E.
author_facet Knight, William E.
Knight, William E.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Influences on the Academic, Career, and Personal Gains and Satisfaction of Community College Students. AIR 1994 Annual Forum Paper. Knight, William E. Academic Achievement Career Development Community Colleges Higher Education Influences Participant Satisfaction Student Attitudes Student Characteristics Student Development Student Experience Two Year College Students Two Year Colleges This study surveyed community college students to determine the dynamic relationships among: their background variables; college experiences; academic, career, and personal gains; and satisfaction. The Community College Student Experience Questionnaire was administered to 1,062 students, and A. Astin's (1991) input-environment-output assessment model was used in the analysis. Primary background variables were age, credit hours completed, gender, family and job effects on school work, and race. Secondary background variables included principle educational goal, hours per week spent studying, and hours per week spent on campus outside of class. College experience variables included quality of effort scales for class, library, faculty, student acquaintances, art/music/theater, science, writing, vocational skills, and counseling experiences. Outcome variables included student self-reported gains and a satisfaction scale. The study concluded that substantial proportions of the variance in academic, career, and personal gains and in satisfaction were accounted for by the direct effects of college experiences/quality of effort, which were, in turn, influenced by student background variables. The faculty quality of effort scale had no direct effects upon any of the gains factors or upon the satisfaction scale. (Contains 24 references.) (JDD)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
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institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 1994
record_format eric
spellingShingle Influences on the Academic, Career, and Personal Gains and Satisfaction of Community College Students. AIR 1994 Annual Forum Paper.
Knight, William E.
Academic Achievement
Career Development
Community Colleges
Higher Education
Influences
Participant Satisfaction
Student Attitudes
Student Characteristics
Student Development
Student Experience
Two Year College Students
Two Year Colleges
Influences on the Academic, Career, and Personal Gains and Satisfaction of Community College Students. AIR 1994 Annual Forum Paper. Knight, William E. Academic Achievement Career Development Community Colleges Higher Education Influences Participant Satisfaction Student Attitudes Student Characteristics Student Development Student Experience Two Year College Students Two Year Colleges This study surveyed community college students to determine the dynamic relationships among: their background variables; college experiences; academic, career, and personal gains; and satisfaction. The Community College Student Experience Questionnaire was administered to 1,062 students, and A. Astin's (1991) input-environment-output assessment model was used in the analysis. Primary background variables were age, credit hours completed, gender, family and job effects on school work, and race. Secondary background variables included principle educational goal, hours per week spent studying, and hours per week spent on campus outside of class. College experience variables included quality of effort scales for class, library, faculty, student acquaintances, art/music/theater, science, writing, vocational skills, and counseling experiences. Outcome variables included student self-reported gains and a satisfaction scale. The study concluded that substantial proportions of the variance in academic, career, and personal gains and in satisfaction were accounted for by the direct effects of college experiences/quality of effort, which were, in turn, influenced by student background variables. The faculty quality of effort scale had no direct effects upon any of the gains factors or upon the satisfaction scale. (Contains 24 references.) (JDD)
title Influences on the Academic, Career, and Personal Gains and Satisfaction of Community College Students. AIR 1994 Annual Forum Paper.
topic Academic Achievement
Career Development
Community Colleges
Higher Education
Influences
Participant Satisfaction
Student Attitudes
Student Characteristics
Student Development
Student Experience
Two Year College Students
Two Year Colleges
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED373644