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| Pascarella, Ernest | 3 |
| Inman, Patricia | 2 |
| Pascarella, Ernest T. | 2 |
| Cloaninger, Charlie E., Jr. | 1 |
| Pierog, John J. | 1 |
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| Reports - Research | 7 |
| Journal Articles | 5 |
| Information Analyses | 1 |
| Speeches/Meeting Papers | 1 |
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Pascarella, Ernest T. – Journal of College Student Personnel, 1985
Proposed a causal model to examine the impact of resident living on student development. Tested the model with 4,191 college students. Secondary analysis indicated that the influence of on-campus living on intellectual and social self-concept is indirect and mediated through interactions with faculty and peers. (Author/BH)
Descriptors: College Students, Commuting Students, Comparative Analysis, Dormitories
Peer reviewedInman, Patricia; Pascarella, Ernest – Journal of College Student Development, 1998
Building on the foundation of research on how critical thinking develops during college and on the extensive research on differences in the resident and commuter student experiences, this article explores aspects of the college experience that might be associated with cognitive development. Analyzes data from six institutions representing 326…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, College Freshmen, College Housing, Commuting Students
Pascarella, Ernest T.; And Others – Journal of College Student Personnel, 1983
Surveyed 269 freshmen students at a nonresidential college to study faculty influence on student development in a commuter setting. Results suggested that the quality of student-faculty interactions may be more important in the personal and intellectual development of commuter students than the frequency of the interactions. (JAC)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, College Faculty, College Students, Commuter Colleges
Peer reviewedPascarella, Ernest; And Others – Journal of College Student Development, 1993
Tested hypothesis that living on campus fostered cognitive growth by estimating relative first-year gains in reading comprehension, mathematical reasoning, and critical thinking of resident (n=40) and commuter (n=170) first-year college students. Controlling for precollege cognitive level, academic motivation, age, work responsibility, and extent…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, College Freshmen, College Housing, Commuting Students
Maryland Univ., College Park. Maryland Longitudinal Study Steering Committee. – 1989
Based on a previous report comparing commuter and resident freshmen at the University of Maryland, College Park, the analysis of the similarities and differences of commuter and resident students is extended in the students' third year of college. Dependent commuters (defined as living at home or with other relatives) were compared to students…
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, Black Students, College Students, Commuting Students
Inman, Patricia; Pascarella, Ernest – 1997
This study examined the critical thinking skills of resident and commuter students during the freshmen year, controlled for precollege background and ability. Differences in commuter and resident students' experience, particularly aspects of academic and social integration were also considered. The study sample was a subset taken from a national…
Descriptors: Academic Ability, College Freshmen, Commuting Students, Critical Thinking
Pierog, John J.; Cloaninger, Charlie E., Jr. – Southern College Personnel Association Journal, 1981
Investigated differences in student attitudes with regard to family independence, peer independence, social consciousness, and cultural sophistication. Results imply that residency status does not necessarily foster individual growth and development as related to independence and cultural sophistication. Suggests administrators should emphasize…
Descriptors: Commuting Students, Comparative Testing, Cultural Awareness, Family Relationship


