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Student Counseling and Personnel Services

Masters Theses

Theses/Dissertations

1998

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Full-Text Articles in Education

An Exploration Of The Undergraduate Experiences Of Faculty, Shannon M. Horn Jan 1998

An Exploration Of The Undergraduate Experiences Of Faculty, Shannon M. Horn

Masters Theses

The purpose of this study was to explore the undergraduate experiences of faculty members at one institution. A review of the literature revealed that there does seem to be a positive relationship between faculty-student interaction and the student's retention at the university level. Students are also more likely to persist if they have become involved in out of class activities. The need to bring these out of class activities in line with the academic mission of the university is clear. Students need to be developed in all aspects of their life.

As student affairs administrators seek to help create seamless …


African American Students On A Predominantly White Campus: Stressful Experiences And Coping Strategies, Katherine Townsend Jan 1998

African American Students On A Predominantly White Campus: Stressful Experiences And Coping Strategies, Katherine Townsend

Masters Theses

Stressful experiences and coping strategies were examined in African American college students at a predominantly white institution. The Ways of Coping-Revised and the Survey of Recent Life Experiences were mailed to all full-time African American students both on and off campus. The results indicated that African American students are not more likely to experience high stress; that stress level does not predetermine coping strategy and that academic class standing does not influence stress level. However, females are likely to experience more stress due to the pressures of time than males. Furthermore, Wishful Thinking was preferred by students who encounter high …


Predicting Rape Myth Acceptance In College, Kurt E. Hegeman Jan 1998

Predicting Rape Myth Acceptance In College, Kurt E. Hegeman

Masters Theses

This study examined how the following factors found in the American college experience predicted college students' acceptance of myths concerning rape: students' gender, personal knowledge of a rape survivor, attitude toward alcohol consumption, actual alcohol consumption, and fraternity/sorority (Greek) membership. Eighty-eight male and 239 female college students completed a demographic survey, the Illinois Rape Myth Acceptance Scale (Payne, 1993), and the Alcohol Expectancy Questionnaire (Brown, Christ, and Goldman, 1987). Results indicate that the college students' actual alcohol consumption rate was not predictive of rape myth acceptance. However, all other factors examined in the study interacted in predicting rape myth acceptance. …