Relationship of a wellness residence hall environment and student sense of competence and academic achievement

This study examined the relationships between student-environment fit and sense of competence and academic achievement of freshmen students in wellness residence hall environments. This study was conducted at a mid-sized, midwestern state university. Perceived and actual fit scores derived from Form...

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Main Author: Nicklaus, Harry E.
Other Authors: McElhinney, James H.
Format: Others
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://cardinalscholar.bsu.edu/handle/handle/179113
http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/762980
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spelling ndltd-BSU-oai-cardinalscholar.bsu.edu-handle-1791132014-07-12T03:32:43ZRelationship of a wellness residence hall environment and student sense of competence and academic achievementNicklaus, Harry E.Residence and education.Academic achievement.Student adjustment.College students -- Health and hygiene.Dormitories.This study examined the relationships between student-environment fit and sense of competence and academic achievement of freshmen students in wellness residence hall environments. This study was conducted at a mid-sized, midwestern state university. Perceived and actual fit scores derived from Form R and Form I of the University Residence Environment Scale (URES) served as the independent measures. Two measures, sense of competence and academic achievement, served as the dependent variables. A Sense of Competence Scale, developed by Steve Janosik (1987), measured a student's level of interpersonal and intellectual competence Academic achievement was measured by accumulative grade point averages. Step-wise multiple regression analyses were used to examine the relationships between these variables.All 571 freshmen residents living in one of six: wellness residence halls were asked to participate in this study. Of this number, 416 (72.7%) returned questionnaires and became the sample population.Freshmen residents living in the wellness residence halls reported that these environments were not as emotionally supportive nor were floor residents as involved with one another as residents would like. Further, a greater emphasis was needed in terms of academic and intellectual stimulation. Additionally, residents in the wellness residence hall environments desired more opportunities to influence their floor/hall and reported that these environments were too competitive.Significant differences existed between freshmen women and men. Women indicated that there was too much emphasis on traditional dating and other social activities and too much emphasis on competition. Women also indicated that their wellness residence hall environments did not provide them with the intellectual stimulation they wanted. Further, women rated the order and organization of these environments much lower than did men.The differences between student-environment fit and sense of competence and student-environment fit and academic achievement were not statistically significant.Actual discrepancy scores were a better measure of student-environment fit than perceived discrepancy scores.Department of Educational LeadershipMcElhinney, James H.2011-06-03T19:29:31Z2011-06-03T19:29:31Z19911991v, 128 leaves ; 28 cm.LD2489.Z64 1991 .N53http://cardinalscholar.bsu.edu/handle/handle/179113http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/762980Virtual Press
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Residence and education.
Academic achievement.
Student adjustment.
College students -- Health and hygiene.
Dormitories.
spellingShingle Residence and education.
Academic achievement.
Student adjustment.
College students -- Health and hygiene.
Dormitories.
Nicklaus, Harry E.
Relationship of a wellness residence hall environment and student sense of competence and academic achievement
description This study examined the relationships between student-environment fit and sense of competence and academic achievement of freshmen students in wellness residence hall environments. This study was conducted at a mid-sized, midwestern state university. Perceived and actual fit scores derived from Form R and Form I of the University Residence Environment Scale (URES) served as the independent measures. Two measures, sense of competence and academic achievement, served as the dependent variables. A Sense of Competence Scale, developed by Steve Janosik (1987), measured a student's level of interpersonal and intellectual competence Academic achievement was measured by accumulative grade point averages. Step-wise multiple regression analyses were used to examine the relationships between these variables.All 571 freshmen residents living in one of six: wellness residence halls were asked to participate in this study. Of this number, 416 (72.7%) returned questionnaires and became the sample population.Freshmen residents living in the wellness residence halls reported that these environments were not as emotionally supportive nor were floor residents as involved with one another as residents would like. Further, a greater emphasis was needed in terms of academic and intellectual stimulation. Additionally, residents in the wellness residence hall environments desired more opportunities to influence their floor/hall and reported that these environments were too competitive.Significant differences existed between freshmen women and men. Women indicated that there was too much emphasis on traditional dating and other social activities and too much emphasis on competition. Women also indicated that their wellness residence hall environments did not provide them with the intellectual stimulation they wanted. Further, women rated the order and organization of these environments much lower than did men.The differences between student-environment fit and sense of competence and student-environment fit and academic achievement were not statistically significant.Actual discrepancy scores were a better measure of student-environment fit than perceived discrepancy scores. === Department of Educational Leadership
author2 McElhinney, James H.
author_facet McElhinney, James H.
Nicklaus, Harry E.
author Nicklaus, Harry E.
author_sort Nicklaus, Harry E.
title Relationship of a wellness residence hall environment and student sense of competence and academic achievement
title_short Relationship of a wellness residence hall environment and student sense of competence and academic achievement
title_full Relationship of a wellness residence hall environment and student sense of competence and academic achievement
title_fullStr Relationship of a wellness residence hall environment and student sense of competence and academic achievement
title_full_unstemmed Relationship of a wellness residence hall environment and student sense of competence and academic achievement
title_sort relationship of a wellness residence hall environment and student sense of competence and academic achievement
publishDate 2011
url http://cardinalscholar.bsu.edu/handle/handle/179113
http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/762980
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