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- First-generation student; advising; academic advising; community college student; student retention; graduation rates; ex post facto; t-test; ANOVA; higher education; high-risk student populations; high-risk students; two-year college; community college; student success; academic achievement; student motivation; cultural navigator; early intervention; self-efficacy; constructivism; advising best practices; adjustment to college; advisor role; adolescence; adolescent; young adult; young adulthood; multicultural student; social and cultural aspect; low income student; minority student; student persistence; adversity; familial support; transition experiences; family relationships; theoretical foundations for academic advising; prescriptive academic advising; developmental academic advising; holistic academic advising; community college stakeholders; faculty advising; community college faculty; advisor effectiveness; student support services; advising as teaching and learning; intrusive academic advising; campus (1)
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Articles 1 - 4 of 4
Full-Text Articles in Education
Indirectly And Directly Involved Students' Perspectives On Multi-Modal Communication Treatment In Persons With Aphasia, Emily Lewis
Honors Theses
Our study investigated the perspectives of students who were either directly or indirectly involved in the Multi-modal communication treatment (MCT) sessions for persons with aphasia. Two undergraduate and two graduate students were recruited from the University of Mississippi who participated in the MCT sessions. We collected their perspectives through semi-structured interviews and used thematic qualitative analysis to analyze our data. We reported themes from the indirectly involved students and the directly involved students and compared how the themes were similar and different between the indirectly and directly involved students. We discussed that both direct and indirect experience for clinical therapy …
Exploring The Impact Of A Brief Counseling Intervention For Improving Mental Health Factors And Learning Strategies Among College Students At An Hsi, James Ikonomopoulos, Kristopher Garza, Javier Cavazos Vela
Exploring The Impact Of A Brief Counseling Intervention For Improving Mental Health Factors And Learning Strategies Among College Students At An Hsi, James Ikonomopoulos, Kristopher Garza, Javier Cavazos Vela
Journal of Academic Underperformance
Abstract
This study evaluated a counseling intervention called the University Turn Around Program (U-Turn) for college students experiencing mental health issues and low academic performance. Social Anxiety, Hostility, and Alcohol Use were measured on the CCAPS-34, and Attitude, Information Processing, Selecting Main Ideas, Test Strategies, and Using Academic Resources were measured on the LASSI-3. Paired samples t-tests revealed improvement for each measure (d = 0.45 to 1.09) supporting the U-Turn program’s inclusion in university counseling centers.
Keywords: College Students, Quasi-Experimental, University Counseling Center
The Effectiveness Of Developmental Academic Advising As A Retention Intervention For First-Generation Community College Students, Valarie A. Morgan, Mary Bess Pannel
The Effectiveness Of Developmental Academic Advising As A Retention Intervention For First-Generation Community College Students, Valarie A. Morgan, Mary Bess Pannel
Journal of Academic Underperformance
Student retention is a primary concern for community colleges since retention rates at the community college are unquestionably lower than retention rates at four-year institutions. First-generation college students are a high-risk student group of particular concern, because they make up over thirty percent of the undergraduate population and are two times more likely to exit college at the end of the first year of enrollment when compared to students whose parent or parents have a bachelor’s degree. The results of this study indicate that neither prescriptive advising nor developmental advising made a significant difference in student retention or graduation rates …
Letter From The Editor, Rebekah Reysen
Letter From The Editor, Rebekah Reysen
Journal of Academic Underperformance
No abstract provided.