Relationship between student selection criteria and learner success for medical dosimetry students

<p> Medical dosimetry education occupies a specialized branch of allied health higher education. Noted international shortages of health care workers, reduced university funding, limitations on faculty staffing, trends in learner attrition, and increased enrollment of nontraditional students f...

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Main Author: Baker, Jamie
Language:EN
Published: University of Phoenix 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3710740
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spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-37107402015-08-27T04:02:42Z Relationship between student selection criteria and learner success for medical dosimetry students Baker, Jamie Higher education administration|Health education|Higher education <p> Medical dosimetry education occupies a specialized branch of allied health higher education. Noted international shortages of health care workers, reduced university funding, limitations on faculty staffing, trends in learner attrition, and increased enrollment of nontraditional students force allied health educational leadership to reevaluate current admission practices. Program officials wish to select medical dosimetry students with the best chances of successful graduation. The purpose of the quantitative ex post facto correlation study was to investigate the relationship between applicant characteristics (cumulative undergraduate grade point average, science grade point average, prior experience as a radiation therapist, and previous academic degrees) and the successful completion of a medical dosimetry program as measured by graduation. A key finding from the quantitative study was the statistically significant positive correlation between a student&rsquo;s previous degree and his or her successful graduation from the medical dosimetry program. Future research investigations could include a larger research sample representative of more medical dosimetry student populations and additional studies concerning the relationship of a prior history in radiation therapy and the impact on success as a medical dosimetry student. Based on the quantitative correlation analysis, allied health leadership on admissions committees could revise student selection rubrics to place less emphasis on an applicant&rsquo;s undergraduate cumulative GPA and increase the weight assigned to previous degrees.</p> University of Phoenix 2015-08-25 00:00:00.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3710740 EN
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Higher education administration|Health education|Higher education
spellingShingle Higher education administration|Health education|Higher education
Baker, Jamie
Relationship between student selection criteria and learner success for medical dosimetry students
description <p> Medical dosimetry education occupies a specialized branch of allied health higher education. Noted international shortages of health care workers, reduced university funding, limitations on faculty staffing, trends in learner attrition, and increased enrollment of nontraditional students force allied health educational leadership to reevaluate current admission practices. Program officials wish to select medical dosimetry students with the best chances of successful graduation. The purpose of the quantitative ex post facto correlation study was to investigate the relationship between applicant characteristics (cumulative undergraduate grade point average, science grade point average, prior experience as a radiation therapist, and previous academic degrees) and the successful completion of a medical dosimetry program as measured by graduation. A key finding from the quantitative study was the statistically significant positive correlation between a student&rsquo;s previous degree and his or her successful graduation from the medical dosimetry program. Future research investigations could include a larger research sample representative of more medical dosimetry student populations and additional studies concerning the relationship of a prior history in radiation therapy and the impact on success as a medical dosimetry student. Based on the quantitative correlation analysis, allied health leadership on admissions committees could revise student selection rubrics to place less emphasis on an applicant&rsquo;s undergraduate cumulative GPA and increase the weight assigned to previous degrees.</p>
author Baker, Jamie
author_facet Baker, Jamie
author_sort Baker, Jamie
title Relationship between student selection criteria and learner success for medical dosimetry students
title_short Relationship between student selection criteria and learner success for medical dosimetry students
title_full Relationship between student selection criteria and learner success for medical dosimetry students
title_fullStr Relationship between student selection criteria and learner success for medical dosimetry students
title_full_unstemmed Relationship between student selection criteria and learner success for medical dosimetry students
title_sort relationship between student selection criteria and learner success for medical dosimetry students
publisher University of Phoenix
publishDate 2015
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3710740
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