This study made use of a model of college success that involves students achieving academic goals and life satisfaction. Hierarchical regressions examined the role of six psychosocial factors for college success among 579 first-year college students. Academic self-efficacy and organization and attention to study were predictive of first semester grade point average (GPA) when controlling relevant demographic factors. Academic self-efficacy was even predictive of end-of-year GPA when controlling previous, first-semester GPA. Mediation analyses revealed that first-semester GPA was an important mediator between these two psychosocial variables and end-of-year GPA. Additional psychosocial variables were predictive of college students’ life sati...
The purpose of this study was to examine the interaction among measures of self-efficacy, locus of c...
College academic success and retention have traditionally been predicted using demographic and acade...
College academic success and retention have traditionally been predicted using demographic and acade...
This study made use of a model of college success that involves students achieving academic goals an...
Background: Predicting who will succeed in an academic and career setting is of critical importance ...
College academic success and retention have traditionally been predicted using demo-graphic and acad...
College academic success and retention have traditionally been predicted using demo-graphic and acad...
The authors report on a large-scale study examining the effects of self-reported psychosocial factor...
The present study used mixed-methods, retrospective causal-comparison research design to analyze the...
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to determine if traditional indicators of college readiness w...
The authors report on a large-scale study examining the effects of self-reported psychosocial factor...
Student success is a vital construct within academia, and, as such, considerable explorations have a...
The purpose of this study was to better predict how a first semester college freshman becomes prepar...
This quantitative study examined the degree to which traditional (high school grade point average (G...
This study examines the relationship between psychosocial and study skill factors (PSFs) and college...
The purpose of this study was to examine the interaction among measures of self-efficacy, locus of c...
College academic success and retention have traditionally been predicted using demographic and acade...
College academic success and retention have traditionally been predicted using demographic and acade...
This study made use of a model of college success that involves students achieving academic goals an...
Background: Predicting who will succeed in an academic and career setting is of critical importance ...
College academic success and retention have traditionally been predicted using demo-graphic and acad...
College academic success and retention have traditionally been predicted using demo-graphic and acad...
The authors report on a large-scale study examining the effects of self-reported psychosocial factor...
The present study used mixed-methods, retrospective causal-comparison research design to analyze the...
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to determine if traditional indicators of college readiness w...
The authors report on a large-scale study examining the effects of self-reported psychosocial factor...
Student success is a vital construct within academia, and, as such, considerable explorations have a...
The purpose of this study was to better predict how a first semester college freshman becomes prepar...
This quantitative study examined the degree to which traditional (high school grade point average (G...
This study examines the relationship between psychosocial and study skill factors (PSFs) and college...
The purpose of this study was to examine the interaction among measures of self-efficacy, locus of c...
College academic success and retention have traditionally been predicted using demographic and acade...
College academic success and retention have traditionally been predicted using demographic and acade...