The Psychosocial Effect of Residentially-Based Learning Communities on First Year Honors Students in a Highly Selective Private University

Thesis advisor: Karen Arnold === Colleges and universities in the United States are currently in the midst of a debate on how to integrate students' academic and social lives in a manner similar to the centuries old model of Oxford and Cambridge. One of the major initiatives by colleges and uni...

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Main Author: Humphreys, Henry James
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Boston College 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2345/1327
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spelling ndltd-BOSTON-oai-dlib.bc.edu-bc-ir_1012422019-05-10T07:35:44Z The Psychosocial Effect of Residentially-Based Learning Communities on First Year Honors Students in a Highly Selective Private University Humphreys, Henry James Thesis advisor: Karen Arnold Text thesis 2010 Boston College English electronic application/pdf Colleges and universities in the United States are currently in the midst of a debate on how to integrate students' academic and social lives in a manner similar to the centuries old model of Oxford and Cambridge. One of the major initiatives by colleges and universities is the re-establishment of residentially-based learning communities whose use has ebbed and flowed throughout the history of American higher education. The fundamental purpose of these communities is to facilitate intentional interactions with faculty and peers within the residence halls. The purpose of this study was to determine quantitatively if first year honors students at Boston College who participated in a residentially-based learning community exhibited greater psychosocial development versus first year honors students who reside in traditional residence halls. The Student Developmental Task and Lifestyle Assessment (SDTLA), based on Chickering's theory of development, was employed to measure the psychosocial growth of the students. The experimental group consisted of 32 first year honors students who resided in the Honors House and the control group was comprised of 64 first year honors students who resided in the traditional residence halls. Results of the study revealed that residing in a residentially based learning community was not the sole contributing factor affecting the participants' psychosocial development. Male and female honors students who resided in the Honors House and the traditional halls experienced similar patterns of developmental growth over the course of their fall semester. It was also found that the mean scores of the participants in this study were consistently higher than the normative data on all tasks, subtasks and scales of the SDTLA. Despite the small sample size, the results appear to indicate that multiple factors, including the intentionality of Boston Colleges' Honors program and institutional value for student formation, contributed to the participant's psychosocial development. Honors Housing Living and Learning Psychosocial Development Residentially-based Learning Communities Student Developmental Task and Lifestyle Assessment Copyright is held by the author, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise noted. Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2010. Submitted to: Boston College. Lynch School of Education. Discipline: Educational Administration and Higher Education. 149948 http://hdl.handle.net/2345/1327
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Honors Housing
Living and Learning
Psychosocial Development
Residentially-based Learning Communities
Student Developmental Task and Lifestyle Assessment
spellingShingle Honors Housing
Living and Learning
Psychosocial Development
Residentially-based Learning Communities
Student Developmental Task and Lifestyle Assessment
Humphreys, Henry James
The Psychosocial Effect of Residentially-Based Learning Communities on First Year Honors Students in a Highly Selective Private University
description Thesis advisor: Karen Arnold === Colleges and universities in the United States are currently in the midst of a debate on how to integrate students' academic and social lives in a manner similar to the centuries old model of Oxford and Cambridge. One of the major initiatives by colleges and universities is the re-establishment of residentially-based learning communities whose use has ebbed and flowed throughout the history of American higher education. The fundamental purpose of these communities is to facilitate intentional interactions with faculty and peers within the residence halls. The purpose of this study was to determine quantitatively if first year honors students at Boston College who participated in a residentially-based learning community exhibited greater psychosocial development versus first year honors students who reside in traditional residence halls. The Student Developmental Task and Lifestyle Assessment (SDTLA), based on Chickering's theory of development, was employed to measure the psychosocial growth of the students. The experimental group consisted of 32 first year honors students who resided in the Honors House and the control group was comprised of 64 first year honors students who resided in the traditional residence halls. Results of the study revealed that residing in a residentially based learning community was not the sole contributing factor affecting the participants' psychosocial development. Male and female honors students who resided in the Honors House and the traditional halls experienced similar patterns of developmental growth over the course of their fall semester. It was also found that the mean scores of the participants in this study were consistently higher than the normative data on all tasks, subtasks and scales of the SDTLA. Despite the small sample size, the results appear to indicate that multiple factors, including the intentionality of Boston Colleges' Honors program and institutional value for student formation, contributed to the participant's psychosocial development. === Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2010. === Submitted to: Boston College. Lynch School of Education. === Discipline: Educational Administration and Higher Education.
author Humphreys, Henry James
author_facet Humphreys, Henry James
author_sort Humphreys, Henry James
title The Psychosocial Effect of Residentially-Based Learning Communities on First Year Honors Students in a Highly Selective Private University
title_short The Psychosocial Effect of Residentially-Based Learning Communities on First Year Honors Students in a Highly Selective Private University
title_full The Psychosocial Effect of Residentially-Based Learning Communities on First Year Honors Students in a Highly Selective Private University
title_fullStr The Psychosocial Effect of Residentially-Based Learning Communities on First Year Honors Students in a Highly Selective Private University
title_full_unstemmed The Psychosocial Effect of Residentially-Based Learning Communities on First Year Honors Students in a Highly Selective Private University
title_sort psychosocial effect of residentially-based learning communities on first year honors students in a highly selective private university
publisher Boston College
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/2345/1327
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