Success in higher education is typically measured by retention and graduation, and traditionally the students who are least likely to succeed are at-risk students. At-risk students are characterized by one or more of the following: being from underrepresented ethnicities and cultures, having low socioeconomic status, being educated in poorly funded primary and secondary education systems, being first-generation college students, or being otherwise marginalized in society. This study was designed to test how at-risk students differ from other students in terms of the size of their academic social networks, the strength of their academic identities, and their mindset, and to what extent these differences influenced their success in higher edu...
Academic success of students has been explained with a variety of individual and socioeconomic facto...
Factors for the academic success of Hispanic American students whose background profiles label them ...
College freshmen who become involved in university activities are more likely to succeed and eventua...
Success in higher education is typically measured by retention and graduation, and traditionally the...
Success in higher education is typically measured by retention and graduation, and traditionally the...
The current research investigated the extent to which social identity threat—the fear of confirming ...
The purpose of this study was to examine resiliency factors in at-risk college students to provide i...
Students accepted into universities with lower academic skills and abilities can often have a diffic...
Mode of access: World Wide Web.Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Hawaii at Manoa, 2004.Includes bibliog...
The present study investigated how female/male nontraditional and traditional college students’ educ...
Typescript (photocopy).This study explored the reasons why students with poor academic backgrounds s...
Undergraduates, especially those from lower income backgrounds, may perceive their social class back...
The purpose of the study was to examine the effect of different identity statuses on academic achiev...
Despite America\u27s increasing diversification of population, disproportionately fewer African-Amer...
The present study surveyed 644 (337 males, 306 females) high school students and found that social g...
Academic success of students has been explained with a variety of individual and socioeconomic facto...
Factors for the academic success of Hispanic American students whose background profiles label them ...
College freshmen who become involved in university activities are more likely to succeed and eventua...
Success in higher education is typically measured by retention and graduation, and traditionally the...
Success in higher education is typically measured by retention and graduation, and traditionally the...
The current research investigated the extent to which social identity threat—the fear of confirming ...
The purpose of this study was to examine resiliency factors in at-risk college students to provide i...
Students accepted into universities with lower academic skills and abilities can often have a diffic...
Mode of access: World Wide Web.Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Hawaii at Manoa, 2004.Includes bibliog...
The present study investigated how female/male nontraditional and traditional college students’ educ...
Typescript (photocopy).This study explored the reasons why students with poor academic backgrounds s...
Undergraduates, especially those from lower income backgrounds, may perceive their social class back...
The purpose of the study was to examine the effect of different identity statuses on academic achiev...
Despite America\u27s increasing diversification of population, disproportionately fewer African-Amer...
The present study surveyed 644 (337 males, 306 females) high school students and found that social g...
Academic success of students has been explained with a variety of individual and socioeconomic facto...
Factors for the academic success of Hispanic American students whose background profiles label them ...
College freshmen who become involved in university activities are more likely to succeed and eventua...