Using data from the Virginia Community College System and building upon prior Florida-based research, this study examines whether student success course enrollment, as well as student and institutional characteristics, has positive associations with shorter term student outcomes, including earning any college credits within the first year and persistence into the second year. The present study finds that students who enrolled in a student success course in the first semester were more likely to earn any college-level credits within the first year and were more likely to persist to the second year. The study also finds that students who were referred to developmental education were more likely to earn any college-level credits within the fir...
This Brief summarizes a study by the Community College Research Center of community college manageme...
The first year of college is a time of significant transition in a student’s life. It is also the ti...
Dual enrollment programs continue to grow in the United States; however, little empirical research e...
Underpreparation is typically viewed in terms of deficiencies in students' basic academic skills. Co...
The challenge of underprepared students\u27 entering America\u27s colleges and universities is not n...
The purpose of this quantitative comparative study was to determine the relationship between retenti...
Graduation date: 2015Over the past twenty years, the national three-year graduation rate for communi...
Many first-year seminar courses focus on helping students adjust academically and socially to colleg...
A nonexperimental, causal-comparative (ex post facto) research design was used in this study to exam...
Community college students face many barriers when they start college, especially if they are from f...
textResearch on student success courses indicates they contribute to successful college transitions ...
This study uses longitudinal data from community college students enrolled in developmental reading ...
This study examined the impact first-year experience courses have on first-year student performance ...
Hundreds of thousands of students across the country begin their postsecondary education at communit...
The purpose of this study was to explore the relationship between taking a student success course an...
This Brief summarizes a study by the Community College Research Center of community college manageme...
The first year of college is a time of significant transition in a student’s life. It is also the ti...
Dual enrollment programs continue to grow in the United States; however, little empirical research e...
Underpreparation is typically viewed in terms of deficiencies in students' basic academic skills. Co...
The challenge of underprepared students\u27 entering America\u27s colleges and universities is not n...
The purpose of this quantitative comparative study was to determine the relationship between retenti...
Graduation date: 2015Over the past twenty years, the national three-year graduation rate for communi...
Many first-year seminar courses focus on helping students adjust academically and socially to colleg...
A nonexperimental, causal-comparative (ex post facto) research design was used in this study to exam...
Community college students face many barriers when they start college, especially if they are from f...
textResearch on student success courses indicates they contribute to successful college transitions ...
This study uses longitudinal data from community college students enrolled in developmental reading ...
This study examined the impact first-year experience courses have on first-year student performance ...
Hundreds of thousands of students across the country begin their postsecondary education at communit...
The purpose of this study was to explore the relationship between taking a student success course an...
This Brief summarizes a study by the Community College Research Center of community college manageme...
The first year of college is a time of significant transition in a student’s life. It is also the ti...
Dual enrollment programs continue to grow in the United States; however, little empirical research e...