Students' Persistence and Academic Success in a First-Year Professional Bachelor Program: The Influence of Students' Learning Strategies and Academic Motivation

The present study explores whether students' learning strategies and academic motivation predict persistence and academic success in the first year of higher education. Freshmen students in a professional bachelor program in teacher education were questioned on their learning strategy use and m...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gert Vanthournout, David Gijbels, Liesje Coertjens, Vincent Donche, Peter Van Petegem
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2012-01-01
Series:Education Research International
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2012/152747
id doaj-f530a2e1fed6444e820da3cfb573cba6
record_format Article
spelling doaj-f530a2e1fed6444e820da3cfb573cba62020-11-24T22:57:41ZengHindawi LimitedEducation Research International2090-40022090-40102012-01-01201210.1155/2012/152747152747Students' Persistence and Academic Success in a First-Year Professional Bachelor Program: The Influence of Students' Learning Strategies and Academic MotivationGert Vanthournout0David Gijbels1Liesje Coertjens2Vincent Donche3Peter Van Petegem4EduBROn-research group, Institute of Education and Information Sciences, University of Antwerp, 2000 Antwerp, BelgiumREPRO-research group, Institute of Education and Information Sciences, University of Antwerp, 2000 Antwerp, BelgiumEduBROn-research group, Institute of Education and Information Sciences, University of Antwerp, 2000 Antwerp, BelgiumEduBROn-research group, Institute of Education and Information Sciences, University of Antwerp, 2000 Antwerp, BelgiumEduBROn-research group, Institute of Education and Information Sciences, University of Antwerp, 2000 Antwerp, BelgiumThe present study explores whether students' learning strategies and academic motivation predict persistence and academic success in the first year of higher education. Freshmen students in a professional bachelor program in teacher education were questioned on their learning strategy use and motivation at the start and at the end of the academic year. Students' learning strategies were assessed using the inventory of learning styles-SV. Motivation was measured using scales from the self-regulation questionnaire and the academic motivation scale. Gender and students' prior education were incorporated as control variables. Logistic regression analyses and general linear modelling were applied to predict persistence and academic success, respectively. In each case a stepwise approach in data analysis was used. Results on persistence indicate that lack of regulation and amotivation at the start of the year are significant predictors. For academic success, results showed that relating and structuring, lack of regulation, and lack of motivation at the end of the year are meaningful predictors. Overall, our study demonstrates that learning strategies and motivation have a moderate explanatory value regarding academic success and persistence, and that these effects remain even after controlling for the influence of background variables.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2012/152747
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gert Vanthournout
David Gijbels
Liesje Coertjens
Vincent Donche
Peter Van Petegem
spellingShingle Gert Vanthournout
David Gijbels
Liesje Coertjens
Vincent Donche
Peter Van Petegem
Students' Persistence and Academic Success in a First-Year Professional Bachelor Program: The Influence of Students' Learning Strategies and Academic Motivation
Education Research International
author_facet Gert Vanthournout
David Gijbels
Liesje Coertjens
Vincent Donche
Peter Van Petegem
author_sort Gert Vanthournout
title Students' Persistence and Academic Success in a First-Year Professional Bachelor Program: The Influence of Students' Learning Strategies and Academic Motivation
title_short Students' Persistence and Academic Success in a First-Year Professional Bachelor Program: The Influence of Students' Learning Strategies and Academic Motivation
title_full Students' Persistence and Academic Success in a First-Year Professional Bachelor Program: The Influence of Students' Learning Strategies and Academic Motivation
title_fullStr Students' Persistence and Academic Success in a First-Year Professional Bachelor Program: The Influence of Students' Learning Strategies and Academic Motivation
title_full_unstemmed Students' Persistence and Academic Success in a First-Year Professional Bachelor Program: The Influence of Students' Learning Strategies and Academic Motivation
title_sort students' persistence and academic success in a first-year professional bachelor program: the influence of students' learning strategies and academic motivation
publisher Hindawi Limited
series Education Research International
issn 2090-4002
2090-4010
publishDate 2012-01-01
description The present study explores whether students' learning strategies and academic motivation predict persistence and academic success in the first year of higher education. Freshmen students in a professional bachelor program in teacher education were questioned on their learning strategy use and motivation at the start and at the end of the academic year. Students' learning strategies were assessed using the inventory of learning styles-SV. Motivation was measured using scales from the self-regulation questionnaire and the academic motivation scale. Gender and students' prior education were incorporated as control variables. Logistic regression analyses and general linear modelling were applied to predict persistence and academic success, respectively. In each case a stepwise approach in data analysis was used. Results on persistence indicate that lack of regulation and amotivation at the start of the year are significant predictors. For academic success, results showed that relating and structuring, lack of regulation, and lack of motivation at the end of the year are meaningful predictors. Overall, our study demonstrates that learning strategies and motivation have a moderate explanatory value regarding academic success and persistence, and that these effects remain even after controlling for the influence of background variables.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2012/152747
work_keys_str_mv AT gertvanthournout studentspersistenceandacademicsuccessinafirstyearprofessionalbachelorprogramtheinfluenceofstudentslearningstrategiesandacademicmotivation
AT davidgijbels studentspersistenceandacademicsuccessinafirstyearprofessionalbachelorprogramtheinfluenceofstudentslearningstrategiesandacademicmotivation
AT liesjecoertjens studentspersistenceandacademicsuccessinafirstyearprofessionalbachelorprogramtheinfluenceofstudentslearningstrategiesandacademicmotivation
AT vincentdonche studentspersistenceandacademicsuccessinafirstyearprofessionalbachelorprogramtheinfluenceofstudentslearningstrategiesandacademicmotivation
AT petervanpetegem studentspersistenceandacademicsuccessinafirstyearprofessionalbachelorprogramtheinfluenceofstudentslearningstrategiesandacademicmotivation
_version_ 1725649710601994240