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How Different Diversity Factors Affect the Perception of First-Year Requirements in Higher Education

TLDR
In this paper, the authors examined how the different factors affect the students' perception of the formal and informal requirements of the first year as more or less difficult to cope with, and found that the differences in the perception largely depend on the individual factors self-efficacy and volition.
Abstract
In the light of growing university entry rates, higher education institutions not only serve larger numbers of students, but also seek to meet first-year students’ ever more diverse needs. Yet to inform universities how to support the transition to higher education, research only offers limited insights. Current studies tend to either focus on the individual factors that affect student success or they highlight students’ social background and their educational biography in order to examine the achievement of selected, non-traditional groups of students. Both lines of research appear to lack integration and often fail to take organisational diversity into account, such as different types of higher education institutions or degree programmes. For a more comprehensive understanding of student diversity, the present study includes individual, social and organisational factors. To gain insights into their role for the transition to higher education, we examine how the different factors affect the students’ perception of the formal and informal requirements of the first year as more or less difficult to cope with. As the perceived requirements result from both the characteristics of the students and the institutional context, they allow to investigate transition at the interface of the micro and the meso level of higher education. Latent profile analyses revealed that there are no profiles with complex patterns of perception of the first-year requirements, but the identified groups rather differ in the overall level of perceived challenges. Moreover, SEM indicates that the differences in the perception largely depend on the individual factors self-efficacy and volition.

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Education at a Glance

TL;DR: A detailed review of the education sector in Australia as in the data provided by the 2006 edition of the OECD's annual publication, 'Education at a Glance' is presented in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Students' transition into higher education: The role of self‐efficacy, regulation strategies, and academic achievements

TL;DR: In this article , the authors investigated the associations between self-efficacy, academic achievements, and regulation in first-year university students during their transition into higher education and found that students' selfefficacy was positively associated with self-regulation and negatively associated with a lack of regulation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Widening the Methodological Lens on the Investigation of Diversity in the Transition to Higher Education: A Discussion

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide an overview of how the different papers contribute to methodological development in the field, in particular by their use of advanced multi-factor analyses and accounting for diversity in student transitions at several levels.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fair enough?! Investigating the specific challenges of diverse university first-year students

TL;DR: In this paper , a study was carried out among 1,048 first-year students from a French-speaking Belgian university using latent profile analysis, their results yielded five profiles representing different combinations of achievement predictors (high school grade, socio-economic status, informed-choice, and self-efficacy beliefs).
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Discussion to the special issue: Supporting the transition of a diversity of students: Developing the “whole student” during and beyond their time at higher education.

TL;DR: De Clercq et al. as discussed by the authors pointed out that environmental characteristics, such as distinctiveness of countries, is often overlooked in research and pointed out the need for research into the broader context to identify how we can better support the diverse student population as they transition into higher education, but also how to prepare them for a positive experience during and beyond their time in higher education.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

When disability becomes ability to navigate the transition to higher education: a comparison of students with and without disabilities

TL;DR: In this article, the specific challenges students with disabilities have to overcome in order to navigate the transition from higher education to higher education are discussed. But little is known about their specific challenges.
Journal ArticleDOI

"Press on regardless!" - The role of volitional control in the first year of higher education

TL;DR: Caroline Trautwein and Katrin Stolz as mentioned in this paper explored the situations, in which students experience motivational decline, but apply strategies to maintain their motivation and academic goal striving in an interview study with 25 students.
Journal ArticleDOI

Auf dem Weg zur Professionalisierung: Anforderungen im Lehramtsstudium

TL;DR: In this paper, an Online-Befragung, in der verschiedene Anforderungen hinsichtlich ihres Erfullungsgrads eingeschatzt wurden, nahmen 686 Lehramtsstudierende einer mittelgrosen Universitat in Nordrhein-Westfalen teil.
Book ChapterDOI

The Guiding Role of Theory in Mixed-Methods Research: Combining Individual and Institutional Perspectives on the Transition to Higher Education

TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide an overview of the potentials and limitations of quantitative and qualitative methods in the research domain, and they show the need for a conceptual framework grounded in the theory of the research object to guide the integration of different methods and findings.
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