Transfer Capital and Academic Planning: Facilitating Successful Two- to Four-year Transfer in North Texas

The study of transfer has been historically important and now approaches critical proportions. Current and historical patterns of enrollment and attainment in American higher education combined with the economic, demographic, political, and social realities of the 21st century drive the need for in...

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Main Author: O’Keefe, Lynette M.
Other Authors: Tampke, Dale
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of North Texas 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc407826/
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spelling ndltd-unt.edu-info-ark-67531-metadc4078262020-07-15T07:09:31Z Transfer Capital and Academic Planning: Facilitating Successful Two- to Four-year Transfer in North Texas O’Keefe, Lynette M. Transfer transfer capital academic planning The study of transfer has been historically important and now approaches critical proportions. Current and historical patterns of enrollment and attainment in American higher education combined with the economic, demographic, political, and social realities of the 21st century drive the need for increased research and more effective practice for successful transfer of students from two- to four-year higher education institutions. An emerging theory for framing transfer success is transfer capital, which recommends academic planning, financial aid, and admissions advising as primary interventions to increase the rate and success of transfer. This mixed-methods study examined the academic planning portion of transfer capital to assess the effect of academic planning on the number of hours transferred, number of leveling courses needed, excess hours, and grade point average (GPA). Quantitative assessment measured differences among new transfer students enrolling between Spring 2012 and Fall 2013. Qualitative assessment was conducted with advisors and leadership that were part of the transfer advising program examined in this study. ANOVA indicated significant findings at the .05 level for each variable except GPA. Qualitative findings provided context and primary themes of institutional context, academic planning, financial aid knowledge, and institutional partnerships. Findings provide direction for practice as well as further research. University of North Texas Tampke, Dale Clark, Allen Cutright, Marc, 1952- 2013-12 Thesis or Dissertation Text https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc407826/ ark: ark:/67531/metadc407826 English Public O’Keefe, Lynette M. Copyright Copyright is held by the author, unless otherwise noted. All rights Reserved.
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Transfer
transfer capital
academic planning
spellingShingle Transfer
transfer capital
academic planning
O’Keefe, Lynette M.
Transfer Capital and Academic Planning: Facilitating Successful Two- to Four-year Transfer in North Texas
description The study of transfer has been historically important and now approaches critical proportions. Current and historical patterns of enrollment and attainment in American higher education combined with the economic, demographic, political, and social realities of the 21st century drive the need for increased research and more effective practice for successful transfer of students from two- to four-year higher education institutions. An emerging theory for framing transfer success is transfer capital, which recommends academic planning, financial aid, and admissions advising as primary interventions to increase the rate and success of transfer. This mixed-methods study examined the academic planning portion of transfer capital to assess the effect of academic planning on the number of hours transferred, number of leveling courses needed, excess hours, and grade point average (GPA). Quantitative assessment measured differences among new transfer students enrolling between Spring 2012 and Fall 2013. Qualitative assessment was conducted with advisors and leadership that were part of the transfer advising program examined in this study. ANOVA indicated significant findings at the .05 level for each variable except GPA. Qualitative findings provided context and primary themes of institutional context, academic planning, financial aid knowledge, and institutional partnerships. Findings provide direction for practice as well as further research.
author2 Tampke, Dale
author_facet Tampke, Dale
O’Keefe, Lynette M.
author O’Keefe, Lynette M.
author_sort O’Keefe, Lynette M.
title Transfer Capital and Academic Planning: Facilitating Successful Two- to Four-year Transfer in North Texas
title_short Transfer Capital and Academic Planning: Facilitating Successful Two- to Four-year Transfer in North Texas
title_full Transfer Capital and Academic Planning: Facilitating Successful Two- to Four-year Transfer in North Texas
title_fullStr Transfer Capital and Academic Planning: Facilitating Successful Two- to Four-year Transfer in North Texas
title_full_unstemmed Transfer Capital and Academic Planning: Facilitating Successful Two- to Four-year Transfer in North Texas
title_sort transfer capital and academic planning: facilitating successful two- to four-year transfer in north texas
publisher University of North Texas
publishDate 2013
url https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc407826/
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