Description
It is commonly accepted that undergraduate degree attainment rates must improve if postsecondary educational institutions are to meet macroeconomic demands. Involvement in co-curricular activities, such as student clubs and organizations, has been shown to increase students' satisfaction with their college experience and the rates by which they might persist. Yet, strategies that college administrators, faculties, and peer leaders may employ to effectively promote co-curricular engagement opportunities to students are not well developed. In turn, I created the Sky Leaders program, a retention-focused intervention designed to promote commuter student involvement in academically-purposeful activities via faculty- and peer-lead mentoring experiences. Working from an interpretivist research paradigm, this quasi-experimental mixed methods action research study was intended to measure the intervention's impact on participants' re-enrollment and reported engagement rates, as well as the effectiveness of its conceptual and logistical aspects. I used enrollment, survey, interview, observation, and focus group data collection instruments to accommodate an integrated data procurement process, which allowed for the consideration of several perspectives related to the same research questions. I analyzed all of the quantitative data captured from the enrollment and survey instruments using descriptive and inferential statistics to explore statistically and practically significant differences between participant groups. As a result, I identified one significant finding that had a perceived positive effect. Expressly, I found the difference between treatment and control participants' reported levels of engagement within co-curricular activities to be statistically and practically significant. Additionally, consistent with Glaser and Strauss' grounded theory approach, I employed open, axial, and selective coding procedures to analyze all of the qualitative data obtained via open-ended survey items, as well as interview, observation, and focus group instruments. After I reviewed and examined the qualitative data corpus, I constructed six themes reflective of the participants' programmatic experiences as well as conceptual and logistical features of the intervention. In doing so, I found that faculty, staff, and peer leaders may efficaciously serve in specific mentoring roles to promote co-curricular engagement opportunities and advance students' institutional academic and social integration, thereby effectively curbing their potential college departure decisions, which often arise out of mal-integrative experiences.
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Details
Title
- Leveraging faculty and peer leaders to promote commuter student co-curricular engagement: a collegiate retention intervention study
Contributors
- Sebold, Brent (Author)
- Beardsley, Audrey (Thesis advisor)
- Serafini, Frank (Committee member)
- Wharton, Christopher (Christopher Mack), 1977- (Committee member)
- Arizona State University (Publisher)
Date Created
The date the item was original created (prior to any relationship with the ASU Digital Repositories.)
2011
Subjects
- Higher Education Administration
- Educational leadership
- co-curricular
- Commuters
- Engagement
- Promotions
- Retention
- Student
- Commuting college students--Services for--Arizona--Phoenix--Case studies.
- Commuting college students
- Student activities--Arizona--Phoenix--Case studies.
- Student activities
- Mentoring in education--Arizona--Phoenix--Case studies.
- Mentoring in education
- College attendance--Arizona--Phoenix--Case studies.
- College attendance
- College dropouts--Arizona--Phoenix--Prevention--Case studies.
- College dropouts
Resource Type
Collections this item is in
Note
-
thesisPartial requirement for: Ed. D., Arizona State University, 2011
-
bibliographyIncludes bibliographical references (p. 80-88)
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Field of study: Leadership and innovation (Policy and administration)
Citation and reuse
Statement of Responsibility
by Brent Sebold