Informational Environments and College Student DropoutSteffen Hillmert, Martin Groß, Bernhard Schmidt-Hertha, Hannes Weber
Zu finden in: Informational Environments (Seite 27 bis 52), 2017
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Zusammenfassungen
As to the environmental
factors that may impact student dropout from university, Chap. 2 focuses on
rules and regulations that constrain information use, in particular as they pertain
to grading procedures. Grading procedures might differ in several respects (e.g.,
whether students can participate in the grading, or in how far grades actually are
valid indicators of performance), and the chapter tracks how far the perceived
justice of grading procedures impacts student dropout. Moreover, the chapter takes
a look at individual precursors of student dropout.While dropout in itself reflects an
outcome of a motivational variable, the chapter investigates how far informational
competences of students (cognitive perspective) and social integration with other
students (social-interactive perspective) contribute to dropout decisions. The chapter
also reports on a large online survey that tracked individual and environmental
factors across various academic fields in Tübingen University, and the influence
of these factors on student dropout.
Von Jürgen Buder, Friedrich W. Hesse im Buch Informational Environments (2017) im Text Informational Environments auf Seite 12In this chapter, an interdisciplinary research group of sociologists and educational scientists discusses how the informational environments of college students influence potential and actual dropout behavior. Previous research has identified academic performance and social integration as the key predictors of student dropout. Our focus is on a further explication of these aspects using information-related factors: media-related competency and information behavior, perceptions of fairness at college, and social integration into university life. Empirical analyses are based on data from a large online survey. We focus on both dropout intentions, as stated in the survey, as well as actual dropouts, as shown in administrative records around 1.5 years after the survey. We find that several factors related to information behavior, justice perceptions as well as social integration, significantly affect dropout intentions. These findings are surprisingly stable across fields of study groups as well as academic performance levels. On the other hand, actual dropouts are much harder to predict in comparison to stated preferences.
Von Steffen Hillmert, Martin Groß, Bernhard Schmidt-Hertha, Hannes Weber im Buch Informational Environments (2017) im Text Informational Environments and College Student Dropout Dieses Kapitel erwähnt ...
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