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Open AccessJournal Article

Non-Traditional Transfer Student Attrition.

Anne M. Monroe
- 01 Oct 2006 - 
- Vol. 12, Iss: 2, pp 33-54
TLDR
In this article, the authors explored the process of non-traditional transfer student attrition through an investigation that illustrates the importance of past student experiences, personal issues, institutional fit, academic integration, and institutional communication and procedures.
Abstract
Current literature focuses on traditional student attrition and on transfer transition, but little information is available on the non-traditional transfer student experience The following study explores the process of non-traditional transfer student attrition through an investigation that illustrates the importance of past student experiences, personal issues, institutional fit, academic integration, and institutional communication and procedures An understanding of how students actually make meaning of their transfer and departure experiences may allow institutions to modify marketing efforts to be more coherent with institutional practice, manage student expectations to enhance post-secondary experiences for today's students in higher education, and eventually introduce functional, non-traditional student retention efforts AMONG THE issues facing American higher education, questions concerning admission, transfer, retention and attrition remain central Several studies have sought to develop, test and modify models dealing with the patterns of "traditional students"-full time, post secondary students between the ages of 18 and 24 Conversely, very few studies have addressed the needs of "non-traditional" students such as transfer students, older adult learners, commuters, part-time students, graduate students, women, students with disabilities, and minority students (Andres and Carpenter, 1997) Early models of retention and attrition of traditional students do provide an understanding that can be broadly applied to non-traditional students However, they do not adequately explain the changes resulting from demographic shift in either student population, nor do they provide an understanding of the complexity and processes by which students make meaning of their experiences at an institution, which ultimately leads to their leaving Theoretical models Numerous theoretical models employed over the past 25 years to explain post-secondary student retention and attrition have examined student variables, institutional variables, and themes such as integration of students in order to help explain the student-institution "fit" Early bodies of work, primarily descriptive in nature, failed to explain the variation in student attrition (Tinto, 1975; Pascarella ck Terenzini, 1980) Psychological models were the earliest attempts to build theories of retention, including Fishbein and Ajzen's (1975) psychological model based on student intentions In their model, attrition is seen as a result of weakened intentions The variable of intention has become important enough for Tinto to add it to his revised model of retention and attrition (Andres L Tinto, 1975, 1982; Pascarella, 1980) These models set out to examine variables affecting the compatibility of students and institutions Tinto, perhaps the most recognized researcher in student retention and attrition, applied exchange theory to Durkheim's theory of suicide According to Tinto (1975), students apply the exchange theory in determining their academic and social integration, interpreted as goals and levels of commitment to the institution If the benefits outweigh the costs, students remain in college; if other activities are believed by the student to have higher rewards and less cost, the student will drop out Numerous variables affect the strength of the student-institution match Students enter with background characteristics such as parental values, socioeconomic status, race, gender, pre-college education, all of which combine to affect the initial commitment to the institution and the ultimate goal of graduating …

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The Impact of Academic Advising on GPA and Retention at the Community College Level.

TL;DR: Dissertation Chair: Dr Thomas C. Nowak Dissertation Committee Members: Dr. John A. Anderson and Dr. Alex Heckert.
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Exploring Community College Students' Transfer Experiences and Perceptions and What They Believe Administration Can Do to Improve Their Experiences.

TL;DR: The authors explored the interconnectedness of the transfer student experience and used it as a foundational framework to inform the administrative leadership on a North Carolina, midsized, historic college campus and found that transfer student experiences are interconnected.
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The Influence of a New Student Orientation Program on Freshman Student Academic Performance and Retention at a Comprehensive Two-Year Community College

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TL;DR: The importance of studying student retention in two-year colleges is discussed in this article, where the authors present a literature review of the Alabama Two-year college system and the Community College of Alabama.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Conceptual Model of Nontraditional Undergraduate Student Attrition

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe the rise in nontraditional enrollments and develop a conceptual model of the attrition process for these students, which is similar to the one described in this paper.