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Peer reviewedTownsend, Barbara K.; And Others – Community College Journal of Research and Practice, 1993
Describes a study to determine which characteristics and behaviors of community college transfer students were associated with persistence and achievement at a private university, focusing on gender, ethnicity, age, achievement test scores, high school and community college grade point averages, high school class rank, major, credit hours earned,…
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, College Transfer Students, Community Colleges, Grade Point Average
Peer reviewedBritton, Bruce K.; Tesser, Abraham – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1991
The hypothesis that college grade point average (GPA) is predictable by student time management was tested. Ninety college students completed a time-management questionnaire in 1983. Four years later, comparison with cumulative GPA indicated that time-management practices may influence achievement. Time management was a better predictor than…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, College Students, Factor Analysis, Grade Point Average
Peer reviewedWilkie, Carolyn; Kuckuck, Sherrill – Journal of the Freshman Year Experience, 1989
The study found that high-risk college freshmen (N=74) who successfully completed a freshman orientation course were less likely to drop out and achieved higher grade point averages over a three-year period than students not in an orientation course. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, College Freshmen, Comparative Analysis, First Year Seminars
Peer reviewedYoung, John W. – Review of Educational Research, 1993
Research in the area of grade adjustment methods from the last 27 years is reviewed in the context of admissions selection and of prediction of student performance in college. Contemporary grade adjustment methods can often produce indexes of academic performance with greater reliability than that found with grade point average. (SLD)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Standards, Admission (School), Admission Criteria
Peer reviewedAeby, Victor G.; Manning, Brenda H.; Thyer, Bruce A.; Carpenter-Aeby, Tracy – School Community Journal, 1999
Two cohorts of students attending an alternative school for chronically disruptive youth received either the standard program or the standard program with additional family involvement. The experimental group experienced statistically significant improvements in locus of control, grade point averages, attendance, and reduced dropout rate, relative…
Descriptors: Attendance, Behavior Problems, Comparative Analysis, Dropout Rate
Peer reviewedJohnson, Monica Kirkpatrick; Beebe, Timothy; Mortimer, Jeylan T.; Snyder, Mark – Journal of Research on Adolescence, 1998
Used panel study of representative community sample to compare volunteer and nonvolunteer adolescents and identify effects of volunteerism on development. Found that volunteers had higher educational plans and aspirations, grade point averages, academic self-esteem, and intrinsic motivation toward school work than did nonvolunteers. Volunteerism…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Aspiration, Adolescent Behavior, Adolescent Development
Peer reviewedMau, Wei-Cheng; And Others – Career Development Quarterly, 1995
Identified predictors that discriminated between nontraditional and traditional career aspirations in eighth-grade female students (n=930). Results indicate that educational aspirations, parental expectations, self-reported grade point averages, and science proficiency were the best discriminators between the groups, and that differences across…
Descriptors: Academic Aspiration, Career Choice, Engineers, Females
Peer reviewedFolger, Wendy A.; Carter, Joyce A.; Chase, Patricia B. – College Student Journal, 2004
The Freshman Empowerment Program is a group process designed to support first generation freshmen. This article discusses the research compiled regarding the success of this program following its initial implementation. Results indicate that GPA was significantly higher for those students involved in the program compared to similar students who…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Low Income Groups, Grade Point Average, Student Attitudes
Jackson, Linda A.; von Eye, Alexander; Biocca, Frank A.; Barbatsis, Gretchen; Zhao, Yong; Fitzgerald, Hiram E. – Developmental Psychology, 2006
HomeNetToo is a longitudinal field study designed to examine the antecedents and consequences of home Internet use in low-income families http://www.HomeNetToo.org). The study was done between December 2000 and June 2002. Among the consequences considered was children's academic performance. Participants were 140 children, mostly African…
Descriptors: Internet, Academic Achievement, Low Income Groups, Longitudinal Studies
Tannenbaum, Sally Cahill; Brown-Welty, Sharon – Journal of Experiential Education, 2006
Educators continually seek effective strategies to address the educational needs of students. Two popular strategies are service-learning and after-school programs. The purpose of this study was to begin to explore the value of embedding service-learning into after-school programs. This study utilized a historical database and compared two groups…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Educational Needs, Grade Point Average, After School Programs
Zwick, Rebecca; Schlemer, Lizabeth – Educational Measurement: Issues and Practice, 2004
The validity of the SAT as an admissions criterion for Latinos and Asian Americans who are not native English speakers was examined. The analyses, based on 1997 and 1998 UCSB freshmen, focused on the effectiveness of SAT scores and high school grade-point average (HSGPA) in predicting college freshman grade-point average (FGPA). When regression…
Descriptors: Test Validity, Language Minorities, Asian American Students, Hispanic American Students
Grayson, J. Paul – Frontiers: The Interdisciplinary Journal of Study Abroad, 2005
The presence of international students in universities has several benefits for the economies of students' countries of origin, the host country's economy, and international and domestic students themselves. Although increasing the number of international students may be a desirable objective, figures analyzed by the Canadian Bureau of…
Descriptors: Foreign Students, International Education, Universities, Grade Point Average
Peer reviewedRayle, Andrea Dixon; Arredondo, Patricia; Kurpius, Sharon E. Robinson – Journal of Counseling & Development, 2005
This study examined the relationships among academic stress, valuing of education, self-esteem, and educational self-efficacy for first-semester, female undergraduates and the interaction of race/ethnicity with these variables. Conducted at a large, southwestern university, this study was part of a comprehensive examination of psychosocial factors…
Descriptors: Self Efficacy, Higher Education, College Freshmen, Females
Newsome, W. Sean – Research on Social Work Practice, 2004
Despite the preliminary studies that support solution-focused brief therapy, limited research has examined the model as a group intervention with students at risk for academic underachievement and school nonattendance. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to evaluate the impact of the model on school attendance and grade point average.…
Descriptors: Intervention, Grade Point Average, Elementary Secondary Education, Underachievement
Albanese, Mark A.; Farrell, Philip; Dottl, Susan – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2005
In 2001, Dr. Jordan Cohen, President of the AAMC, called for medical schools to consider using an Medical College Admission Test (MCAT) threshold to eliminate high-risk applicants from consideration and then to use non-academic qualifications for further consideration. This approach would seem to be consistent with the recent Supreme Court ruling…
Descriptors: Grade Point Average, Medical Schools, Qualifications, College Admission

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