First-Year Seminar (FYS) or First-Year Experience (FYE) courses help college students transition to college, learn valuable academic skills, and create successful habits. This research analyzes the benefit of reorganizing FYS curriculum around reflection and integrative learning, by comparing students who participated in this redesigned curriculum with those who participated in a skills-based, extended orientation first-year seminar course. The two groups were compared on several measures, including perception about the utility of reflective and integrative thinking, first year retention, and first year GPA. Our findings suggest that prioritizing reflection and integrative learning in a FYS seminar is beneficial
John N. Gardner in 1972 advocated a new concept called the first-year seminar to increase academic p...
College student retention is a complex phenomenon influenced by a myriad of factors and with wide-ra...
The purpose of this comparative study was to determine the relationship of a First-Year Seminar cour...
The transition into college remains one of the most formative and complex phases in an individual’s ...
As faculty directors of first-year seminar (FYS) programs, one of us at a large public university an...
A substantial amount of research shows that the first year of college is a “make or break” time for ...
Student retention has been a mystery within colleges and universities for decades. Administrators co...
Research has shown that the freshman year can be crucial for the success or failure of first year st...
Recognized by the association of American Colleges & Universities (AAC&U) as a high-impact practice,...
Although students in higher education are increasingly becoming more diverse, one thing that student...
We review the effectiveness of first-year seminars based on the widely used criteria of first-year g...
Increasing student retention and improving graduation rates continues to remain a critical issue for...
Increasing student retention and improving graduation rates continues to remain a critical issue for...
First-Year Seminar (FYS) courses have been the foundational building blocks for academic and nonacad...
First-year seminar (FYS) courses tend to focus on preparing students for successful academic and soc...
John N. Gardner in 1972 advocated a new concept called the first-year seminar to increase academic p...
College student retention is a complex phenomenon influenced by a myriad of factors and with wide-ra...
The purpose of this comparative study was to determine the relationship of a First-Year Seminar cour...
The transition into college remains one of the most formative and complex phases in an individual’s ...
As faculty directors of first-year seminar (FYS) programs, one of us at a large public university an...
A substantial amount of research shows that the first year of college is a “make or break” time for ...
Student retention has been a mystery within colleges and universities for decades. Administrators co...
Research has shown that the freshman year can be crucial for the success or failure of first year st...
Recognized by the association of American Colleges & Universities (AAC&U) as a high-impact practice,...
Although students in higher education are increasingly becoming more diverse, one thing that student...
We review the effectiveness of first-year seminars based on the widely used criteria of first-year g...
Increasing student retention and improving graduation rates continues to remain a critical issue for...
Increasing student retention and improving graduation rates continues to remain a critical issue for...
First-Year Seminar (FYS) courses have been the foundational building blocks for academic and nonacad...
First-year seminar (FYS) courses tend to focus on preparing students for successful academic and soc...
John N. Gardner in 1972 advocated a new concept called the first-year seminar to increase academic p...
College student retention is a complex phenomenon influenced by a myriad of factors and with wide-ra...
The purpose of this comparative study was to determine the relationship of a First-Year Seminar cour...