Perceptions of Academic Advising and Student Retention

<p>The purpose of this research study was to examine student and academic advisors? perceptions of advisement techniques to determine the connection between academic advising strategies and student retention. If student retention rates are not addressed, higher education institutions are at r...

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Main Author: Soden, Stacy Renaee
Language:EN
Published: Lindenwood University 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10637689
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spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-106376892017-11-23T16:10:25Z Perceptions of Academic Advising and Student Retention Soden, Stacy Renaee Educational administration|Higher education <p>The purpose of this research study was to examine student and academic advisors? perceptions of advisement techniques to determine the connection between academic advising strategies and student retention. If student retention rates are not addressed, higher education institutions are at risk of losing students, which is costly to the institution and the student (Himes, 2014). Most college students are in a state of change and need academic advice to achieve success during a college transition (Tinto, 2012). Academic advisors can assist students in finding the right career for students? specific strengths. This qualitative study utilized Tinto?s (2012) theories of student departure and retention to provide an understanding of how student retention rates can be based on a lack of positive institutional relationships between students and academic advisors. A higher education institution must establish conditions within its own system to promote positive student experiences and outcomes (Vianden & Barlow, 2015). Four research questions guided this study. Focus groups and interviews were used to collect data from students and academic advisors. Students and academic advisors discussed academic advising experiences, student satisfaction, and information needed to achieve successful advising sessions. Themes emerged relating to developing relationships, personalized advising sessions, and a consistent campus. Tinto (2012) stated students need individualized academic and social support to properly transition into college. Findings of the study indicated progressive academic advisement strategies have a positive impact on student retention. Lindenwood University 2017-11-18 00:00:00.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10637689 EN
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Educational administration|Higher education
spellingShingle Educational administration|Higher education
Soden, Stacy Renaee
Perceptions of Academic Advising and Student Retention
description <p>The purpose of this research study was to examine student and academic advisors? perceptions of advisement techniques to determine the connection between academic advising strategies and student retention. If student retention rates are not addressed, higher education institutions are at risk of losing students, which is costly to the institution and the student (Himes, 2014). Most college students are in a state of change and need academic advice to achieve success during a college transition (Tinto, 2012). Academic advisors can assist students in finding the right career for students? specific strengths. This qualitative study utilized Tinto?s (2012) theories of student departure and retention to provide an understanding of how student retention rates can be based on a lack of positive institutional relationships between students and academic advisors. A higher education institution must establish conditions within its own system to promote positive student experiences and outcomes (Vianden & Barlow, 2015). Four research questions guided this study. Focus groups and interviews were used to collect data from students and academic advisors. Students and academic advisors discussed academic advising experiences, student satisfaction, and information needed to achieve successful advising sessions. Themes emerged relating to developing relationships, personalized advising sessions, and a consistent campus. Tinto (2012) stated students need individualized academic and social support to properly transition into college. Findings of the study indicated progressive academic advisement strategies have a positive impact on student retention.
author Soden, Stacy Renaee
author_facet Soden, Stacy Renaee
author_sort Soden, Stacy Renaee
title Perceptions of Academic Advising and Student Retention
title_short Perceptions of Academic Advising and Student Retention
title_full Perceptions of Academic Advising and Student Retention
title_fullStr Perceptions of Academic Advising and Student Retention
title_full_unstemmed Perceptions of Academic Advising and Student Retention
title_sort perceptions of academic advising and student retention
publisher Lindenwood University
publishDate 2017
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10637689
work_keys_str_mv AT sodenstacyrenaee perceptionsofacademicadvisingandstudentretention
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