Examining the mature interpersonal relationship status of first-year engineering students within residential learning communities

<p> The purpose of this mixed-methods, sequential, explanatory study was to investigate the differences regarding the status of mature-interpersonal-relationship (MIR) development in first-year engineering students who elected to live within residential learning communities (RLCs) when compare...

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Main Author: Waller, Brent
Language:EN
Published: Colorado State University 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3746156
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spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-37461562016-01-14T03:57:41Z Examining the mature interpersonal relationship status of first-year engineering students within residential learning communities Waller, Brent Educational administration|Higher education <p> The purpose of this mixed-methods, sequential, explanatory study was to investigate the differences regarding the status of mature-interpersonal-relationship (MIR) development in first-year engineering students who elected to live within residential learning communities (RLCs) when compared to the status of MIR development in those first-year engineering students who lived within a traditional residential environment at a science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) institution. A survey of 582 first-year engineering students at a STEM institution yielded quantitative results. Then, to explore the initial results in more depth, a follow-up study using two separate focus groups was completed with purposefully selected respondents. The follow-up qualitative phase attempted to provide logical connections to the findings from the original quantitative phase, which showed that students who live within RLCs have experiences that provide those students with opportunities for MIRs. In the quantitative phase, statistically significant results were limited to a difference by gender. The quantitative and qualitative findings from the two phases of the study are discussed, with reference to prior research. Implications and recommendations are provided.</p> Colorado State University 2016-01-12 00:00:00.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3746156 EN
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Educational administration|Higher education
spellingShingle Educational administration|Higher education
Waller, Brent
Examining the mature interpersonal relationship status of first-year engineering students within residential learning communities
description <p> The purpose of this mixed-methods, sequential, explanatory study was to investigate the differences regarding the status of mature-interpersonal-relationship (MIR) development in first-year engineering students who elected to live within residential learning communities (RLCs) when compared to the status of MIR development in those first-year engineering students who lived within a traditional residential environment at a science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) institution. A survey of 582 first-year engineering students at a STEM institution yielded quantitative results. Then, to explore the initial results in more depth, a follow-up study using two separate focus groups was completed with purposefully selected respondents. The follow-up qualitative phase attempted to provide logical connections to the findings from the original quantitative phase, which showed that students who live within RLCs have experiences that provide those students with opportunities for MIRs. In the quantitative phase, statistically significant results were limited to a difference by gender. The quantitative and qualitative findings from the two phases of the study are discussed, with reference to prior research. Implications and recommendations are provided.</p>
author Waller, Brent
author_facet Waller, Brent
author_sort Waller, Brent
title Examining the mature interpersonal relationship status of first-year engineering students within residential learning communities
title_short Examining the mature interpersonal relationship status of first-year engineering students within residential learning communities
title_full Examining the mature interpersonal relationship status of first-year engineering students within residential learning communities
title_fullStr Examining the mature interpersonal relationship status of first-year engineering students within residential learning communities
title_full_unstemmed Examining the mature interpersonal relationship status of first-year engineering students within residential learning communities
title_sort examining the mature interpersonal relationship status of first-year engineering students within residential learning communities
publisher Colorado State University
publishDate 2016
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3746156
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