Claiming Their Education: The Impact of a Required Course for Academic Probation Students with a Focus on Purpose and Motivation
This study assesses the impact of a required course designed to retain and graduate students placed on Academic Probation. We adopted a quantitative approach to this inquiry. We found that students who took the class were approximately 20% more likely to persist and graduate compared to students pl...
Main Authors: | , , , , |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Indiana University Office of Scholarly Publishing
2019-07-01
|
Series: | Journal of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning |
Online Access: | https://scholarworks.iu.edu/journals/index.php/josotl/article/view/24638 |
id |
doaj-9fcb5ea9bf204ca597d73a7236c7bc77 |
---|---|
record_format |
Article |
spelling |
doaj-9fcb5ea9bf204ca597d73a7236c7bc772020-11-25T01:35:54ZengIndiana University Office of Scholarly PublishingJournal of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning1527-93162019-07-0119410.14434/josotl.v19i4.24638Claiming Their Education: The Impact of a Required Course for Academic Probation Students with a Focus on Purpose and MotivationMolly Ann Burke Leon0Anthony Guest Scott1Andrew M. Koke2Stefano Fiorini3Alexander Rangazas4Indiana University BloomingtonIndiana University BloomingtonIndiana University BloomingtonIndiana University BloomingtonIndiana University Bloomington This study assesses the impact of a required course designed to retain and graduate students placed on Academic Probation. We adopted a quantitative approach to this inquiry. We found that students who took the class were approximately 20% more likely to persist and graduate compared to students placed on probation who did not take the course. Further, we note the specific curriculum of the course, which focuses on helping students identify purpose and motivation for their higher education experience. We suggest the specific educational interventions that may help dramatically increase the retention and graduation of students facing academic difficulty. https://scholarworks.iu.edu/journals/index.php/josotl/article/view/24638 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Molly Ann Burke Leon Anthony Guest Scott Andrew M. Koke Stefano Fiorini Alexander Rangazas |
spellingShingle |
Molly Ann Burke Leon Anthony Guest Scott Andrew M. Koke Stefano Fiorini Alexander Rangazas Claiming Their Education: The Impact of a Required Course for Academic Probation Students with a Focus on Purpose and Motivation Journal of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning |
author_facet |
Molly Ann Burke Leon Anthony Guest Scott Andrew M. Koke Stefano Fiorini Alexander Rangazas |
author_sort |
Molly Ann Burke Leon |
title |
Claiming Their Education: The Impact of a Required Course for Academic Probation Students with a Focus on Purpose and Motivation |
title_short |
Claiming Their Education: The Impact of a Required Course for Academic Probation Students with a Focus on Purpose and Motivation |
title_full |
Claiming Their Education: The Impact of a Required Course for Academic Probation Students with a Focus on Purpose and Motivation |
title_fullStr |
Claiming Their Education: The Impact of a Required Course for Academic Probation Students with a Focus on Purpose and Motivation |
title_full_unstemmed |
Claiming Their Education: The Impact of a Required Course for Academic Probation Students with a Focus on Purpose and Motivation |
title_sort |
claiming their education: the impact of a required course for academic probation students with a focus on purpose and motivation |
publisher |
Indiana University Office of Scholarly Publishing |
series |
Journal of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning |
issn |
1527-9316 |
publishDate |
2019-07-01 |
description |
This study assesses the impact of a required course designed to retain and graduate students placed on Academic Probation. We adopted a quantitative approach to this inquiry. We found that students who took the class were approximately 20% more likely to persist and graduate compared to students placed on probation who did not take the course. Further, we note the specific curriculum of the course, which focuses on helping students identify purpose and motivation for their higher education experience. We suggest the specific educational interventions that may help dramatically increase the retention and graduation of students facing academic difficulty.
|
url |
https://scholarworks.iu.edu/journals/index.php/josotl/article/view/24638 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT mollyannburkeleon claimingtheireducationtheimpactofarequiredcourseforacademicprobationstudentswithafocusonpurposeandmotivation AT anthonyguestscott claimingtheireducationtheimpactofarequiredcourseforacademicprobationstudentswithafocusonpurposeandmotivation AT andrewmkoke claimingtheireducationtheimpactofarequiredcourseforacademicprobationstudentswithafocusonpurposeandmotivation AT stefanofiorini claimingtheireducationtheimpactofarequiredcourseforacademicprobationstudentswithafocusonpurposeandmotivation AT alexanderrangazas claimingtheireducationtheimpactofarequiredcourseforacademicprobationstudentswithafocusonpurposeandmotivation |
_version_ |
1725065485615104000 |