According to ACT, Inc (Midwestern counterpart to the SAT), the number of college freshmen returning for a second year at their original "4-year" institution is on the decline.
Shocking, I know... (Ok, I'm being ironic-- I wrote a dissertation about the "swirling" students who attend multiple schools, and have been quite vocal about the importance of mobility to debates over student success and degree completion.)
Approximately 2/3 of students who enter 4-year colleges stick around for another year. That number used to be (somewhat) higher (closer to 70-75%). Something to get worked up about? Depends on how you approach the question.
If you're a higher ed administrator focused on dollars and cents, sure you're not going to like it. Fewer returning students means more empty seats in upper-level courses, which you should but probably aren't filling with transfer students. It also means your institutional degree completion rates are lower.
If you're an educational reformer focused on student success, you probably see things differently. Before getting upset, you'd first want to know: Are students leaving school 1 to drop out of college? Or do they move to school 2, find a better fit (financially, academically, socially?) and end up with a degree? Are students moving because moving is a fact of their life, they've always been mobile, and they're not attached to colleges in the "traditional" sense of one student/one school? Or, are schools serving them poorly, eventually encouraging their departure?
My own work has identified some causes for concern. Students do not change schools in equitable ways-- meaning that the more advantaged kids tend to leave one 4-year college for another, and not suffer much in terms of BA completion, while the less advantaged (read: lower levels of parental education) tend to leave 4-year colleges after struggling academically in their first year (this is NET of high school prep, btw), and end up at a community college. Those folks hardly ever get degrees. All of this is described in my 2006 paper in Sociology of Education, and a forthcoming paper in the same journal.
The ACT folks say the trend "suggests that more students may be opting out of college during or after their first year." First, as a sociologist let me gag openly at the idea of "opting out." Second, having not accounted for changes in the composition of college freshmen that could account for changes in retention rates, it's not clear what we do with this trend.
From a research perspective, we should also ask why we're stuck with ACT data on this one-- they aren't capturing enrollment beyond school 1 (as we can with national datasets such as the NELS) and so can't dig underneath the trendlines. Why are we stuck? Because the kind of longitudinal student unit record data we'd need to do the analysis is only collected by the feds every 10 or so years-- hard to establish much of a trend with that. If you just compare NLS-72, HSB, and NELS, it doesn't look like much of a trend... More micro, more interesting.
So we're left with a bunch of hypotheses, for now. The ACT guy thinks students leave 4-year colleges for financial reasons. Maybe. My own analyses suggest that family income doesn't have much to do with it though. We can sort of test this in my study, by estimating a causal effect of financial aid on first year retention. With the first cohort of kids in the middle of the school year right now, you'll have to bear with me... I'll try to find the answers.
In the meantime, let's get focused on whether and when students graduate. Not where they finish. That is: a student-focused rather than school-focused approach to success. Whaddya say?
Label
2008 election
(16)
2010 election
(1)
Aaron Pallas
(4)
academia
(1)
academic capitalism
(1)
academic freedom
(2)
academic life
(8)
academic standards
(8)
accountability
(12)
achievement gap
(1)
Achieving The Dream
(1)
ACT
(2)
adequate yearly progress
(3)
admission
(1)
admissions yield
(1)
Adrian Fenty
(1)
AERA
(3)
affordability
(4)
African American
(1)
AFT
(1)
agriculture
(1)
Al Sharpton
(1)
Alabama
(5)
Alaska
(1)
Alaska Statewide Mentor Project
(1)
Alejandro Escovedo
(1)
Alexander Russo
(2)
Alice Waters
(2)
Alliance for Excellent Education
(1)
American Council of Education
(1)
American Education Finance Association
(1)
American Enterprise Institute
(4)
American Graduation Initiative
(6)
American Idol
(1)
American Legislative Exchange Council
(2)
American Prospect
(1)
Amos Lee
(1)
Andy Rotherham
(3)
Andy Smarick
(1)
APPAM
(1)
April Fool's Day
(1)
Arizona
(4)
Arkansas
(2)
Arne Duncan
(20)
Arnold Schwarzenegger
(4)
ARRA
(48)
Assessment
(8)
associated students of madison
(1)
Australia
(1)
AYP
(1)
babies
(1)
ballot measure
(2)
Barack Obama
(51)
Bennett hypothesis
(1)
Berkeley
(1)
Bernie Sanders
(2)
Bill Clinton
(1)
Bill Ritter
(1)
bipartisanship
(1)
black students
(2)
black unemployment
(1)
blog
(9)
blogs
(1)
Bob Riley
(1)
Bob Wise
(1)
book
(1)
Boston College
(1)
Boston Foundation
(1)
Boston Globe
(1)
Brian Jacob
(1)
Brookings Institution
(5)
budget
(12)
Cal Grant
(2)
California
(23)
California Community College System
(3)
Carnegie Corporation
(2)
Carolyn "Biddy" Martin
(42)
Carolyn Hoxby
(1)
casino
(1)
Cathleen Black
(1)
Cato Institute
(1)
Cecilia Rouse
(1)
Center for American Progress
(2)
Central Falls
(4)
Charles Murray
(1)
Charlie Crist
(2)
cheating
(1)
Chez Panisse
(1)
Chicago
(3)
Chicago New Teacher Center
(1)
Chicago Public Schools
(8)
Chicago Tribune
(4)
childcare
(1)
children
(7)
China
(1)
Chris Christie
(1)
Christine O'Donnell
(1)
Christopher Avery
(1)
Chronicle of Higher Education
(10)
civic literacy
(1)
class size
(2)
Claudia Buchmann
(1)
Clinton
(1)
CNN
(2)
collective bargaining
(1)
college
(65)
college access
(7)
college admissions
(8)
College Board
(3)
college completion
(20)
College Cost Reduction and Access Act
(3)
college degree
(7)
college entry
(3)
college for all
(2)
college preparation
(1)
college students
(1)
Colorado
(6)
Columbia University
(1)
commission
(1)
community college
(23)
community college; pregnancy; students
(1)
community colleges
(5)
community colleges; media; Brookings Institution
(1)
community schools
(1)
compensation
(7)
conference
(3)
Connecticut
(3)
Consortium for Chicago School Research
(5)
Council of Chief State School Officers
(1)
CPAC
(1)
creationism
(5)
Crowded House
(3)
CSA
(1)
CUNY
(1)
curriculum
(4)
Dan Wilson
(1)
Dana Goldstein
(1)
data
(6)
Dave Carter
(1)
David Brooks
(1)
David Keene
(1)
David Koch
(1)
day care
(1)
debate
(2)
Deborah Gist
(2)
degree
(2)
Delaware
(8)
democracy
(1)
Denver
(2)
Denver ProComp
(1)
Diane Ravitch
(2)
direct lending
(1)
DREAM Act
(1)
dropout prevention
(3)
e Duncan
(1)
early childhood
(2)
economic justice
(2)
Edible Schoolyard
(2)
Eduardo Padron
(1)
Education
(63)
Education Commission of the States
(2)
Education Sector
(4)
Education Trust
(1)
Education Week
(7)
Educational Policy Institute
(1)
edujobs
(1)
Edutopia
(1)
Eduwonk
(1)
eduwonkette
(1)
employment
(5)
Eric Hirsch
(1)
ESEA
(9)
evaluation
(2)
evolution
(9)
Experimental Sites Initiative
(1)
faculty
(6)
FAFSA
(1)
fed
(1)
federal
(25)
financial aid
(31)
firewall
(1)
Florida
(10)
folk
(1)
food
(12)
foodie finds
(6)
for-profit
(3)
Fordham Foundation
(1)
foreign policy
(1)
Forum for Education and Democracy
(1)
four-year-old kindergarten
(1)
Frank McCourt
(1)
free tuition
(2)
Gabrielle Giffords
(1)
Gallup
(1)
GAO
(1)
gardening
(2)
Gaslight Anthem
(1)
gender gap
(2)
Geographic literacy
(2)
geography
(2)
George Miller
(1)
George W. Bush
(2)
Georgia
(4)
Gomez
(1)
governance
(2)
governor
(12)
Grace Potter and the Nocturnals
(1)
graduation rate
(7)
Grammy
(1)
Great Big Sea
(1)
Great Colleges to Work For
(1)
Greg Darneider
(2)
Greg Walton
(1)
Griffin House
(1)
gun
(1)
guns
(1)
Guster
(1)
Harvard University
(1)
Hawaii
(2)
Hechinger Institute
(1)
Helen Ladd
(1)
high school
(10)
high tuition high aid
(2)
higher education
(52)
highly qualified
(1)
Hothouse Flowers
(1)
Howard Fuller
(1)
Huffington Post
(1)
hunger
(2)
i3
(1)
Idaho
(4)
Illinois
(15)
Illinois Education Association
(2)
Indiana
(5)
induction
(22)
Inez Tenenbaum
(1)
Inside Higher Ed
(2)
Institute for Education Sciences
(4)
Institute for Justice
(1)
intelligent design
(3)
Intercollegiate Studies Institute
(1)
Invest in Innovation fund
(1)
Iowa
(5)
Ireland
(1)
Jack Jennings
(1)
Jack O'Connell
(1)
Jack Reed
(2)
James Rosenbaum
(1)
Jay Greene
(1)
Jay Mathews
(3)
Jeff Tweedy
(1)
Jewish
(1)
Jill Biden
(2)
Jim Doyle
(6)
Jo Anderson
(1)
jobs
(1)
Jobs For the Future
(1)
Joe Lieberman
(1)
Joel Klein
(5)
John Bound
(1)
John Conyers
(1)
John Easton
(2)
John McCain
(8)
Johnny Marr
(1)
Jon Kyl
(1)
Jon Stewart
(1)
Jonah Rockoff
(2)
Jonathan Alter
(1)
Joyce Foundation
(2)
Judy Scott-Clayton
(1)
Justin Townes Earle
(1)
Kansas
(3)
Kaplan
(1)
Kasey Chambers
(1)
Kathleen Edwards
(1)
Katie Couric
(1)
KCRW
(1)
Keane
(1)
Kentucky
(7)
Kevin Carey
(3)
Kevin Reilly
(3)
kids
(1)
Kim Taylor
(1)
kindergarten
(1)
KIPP
(1)
KnowHow2Go
(1)
KT Tunstall
(1)
L'Etoile
(1)
Laramie
(1)
Lars Lefgren
(1)
leadership
(6)
Learn and Earn
(1)
learning time
(1)
lenders
(1)
Letterman
(1)
Liam Finn
(2)
Liam Ó MaonlaÃ
(1)
Linda Darling-Hammond
(5)
Lisa Germano
(1)
loan
(7)
loan forgiveness
(1)
Long Beach Unified
(1)
Los Angeles
(5)
Los Angeles Times
(4)
lotto
(1)
Louisiana
(10)
low income
(13)
low-income
(3)
low-performing
(4)
Lucinda Williams
(1)
Luka Bloom
(1)
Lumina Foundation
(4)
Madison
(5)
Madison Initiative
(1)
Madison Initiative for Undergraduates
(10)
Margaret Spellings
(1)
Mark Sanford
(4)
Mark Taylor
(1)
Mark Yudof
(1)
Martha Kanter
(1)
Martin Luther King Jr.
(1)
Martin O'Malley
(1)
Maryland
(10)
Massachusetts
(15)
mathematics
(2)
Matt Nathanson
(1)
media
(2)
Meet The Press
(1)
mentoring
(24)
Miami-Dade
(1)
Michael Bennet
(2)
Michael Bloomberg
(2)
Michael Lovenheim
(1)
Michael Olneck
(1)
Michelle Rhee
(13)
Michigan
(13)
Mike Easley
(1)
Milwaukee
(8)
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
(6)
Milwaukee Parental Choice Program
(5)
Minnesota
(3)
Missouri
(2)
moms
(1)
More at Four
(1)
Morgan State University
(1)
motivation
(1)
MPS
(1)
music
(35)
NAACP
(1)
NAEP
(1)
Nancy Grasmick
(1)
National Board of Education Sciences
(1)
National Council on Teacher Quality
(1)
National Education Association
(2)
National Governors Association
(3)
National Staff Development Council
(1)
NCLB
(10)
NCTAF
(1)
NEA
(1)
Nebraska
(1)
need-sensitive admissions
(1)
Neil Finn
(3)
Nevada
(7)
New America Foundation
(1)
New Badger Partnership
(49)
New Jersey
(8)
New Orleans
(1)
New Republic
(1)
New Teacher Center
(25)
New Teacher Project
(3)
New York
(13)
New York City
(6)
New York Times
(28)
newspaper
(1)
Newsweek
(2)
Nicholas Kristof
(1)
No Child Left Behind
(15)
North Carolina
(6)
North Dakota
(1)
nutrition
(2)
Oakland
(1)
Obama
(3)
Obama effect
(2)
Ohio
(5)
Oklahoma
(1)
Opportunity Scholarship Program
(1)
Oregon
(7)
Outlandos Music
(1)
Oxfam
(1)
Pandora Radio
(1)
pardon
(1)
parental responsibility
(1)
parenting
(3)
Pat Quinn
(1)
Paul Goren
(1)
Paul Krugman
(2)
Paul Reville
(1)
Paul Tough
(1)
PBS
(1)
Pell Grant
(7)
Pennsylvania
(2)
performance funding
(1)
Performance Pay
(5)
Perkins
(1)
Pete Christianson
(1)
Peter Hinrichs
(1)
Pew
(1)
Phi Delta Kappan
(1)
Philadelphia
(3)
Philip Morris
(1)
policy
(7)
policy implementation
(1)
policy reform
(3)
politics
(2)
poll
(4)
poor
(1)
pork
(1)
Portland
(1)
poverty
(1)
pre-kindergarten
(1)
President
(10)
presidential campaign
(8)
press conference
(1)
principal
(3)
prison
(1)
privatization
(1)
professional development
(7)
professor
(14)
Public Agenda
(1)
Public Education Network
(1)
public university
(3)
Quebec
(1)
Race To The Top
(52)
radio
(1)
Radiohead
(1)
Ray LaMontagne
(1)
reading
(1)
Rebecca Blank
(1)
recession
(1)
recipe
(1)
reform
(10)
remediation
(1)
Rennie Center
(1)
Republican National Convention
(1)
Republicans
(6)
research
(28)
Rhett Miller
(1)
Rhode Island
(14)
Richard Elmore
(1)
Richard Thaler
(1)
Richard Vedder
(1)
Rick Hess
(2)
Rick Perry
(2)
Robert Linn
(1)
Robert Reich
(2)
Robert Shireman
(2)
Rod Blagojevich
(2)
Rod Paige
(1)
Ron Sexsmith
(1)
RttT
(39)
Russia
(1)
SAFRA
(4)
Sara Goldrick-Rab
(6)
Sarah Palin
(6)
Sarah Turner
(1)
SAT
(1)
SB6
(1)
scholarship
(1)
school
(10)
school breakfast
(1)
school choice
(10)
school health
(1)
school lunch
(1)
school safety
(1)
school turnaround
(3)
school year
(1)
science
(6)
Scott Walker
(11)
Secretary of Education
(4)
Semisonic
(1)
Sesame Street
(1)
Share Our Strength
(1)
skoolboy
(1)
Slate
(2)
sleep
(1)
Slow Food
(1)
social policy
(2)
sociology of education
(4)
South Carolina
(4)
South Dakota
(2)
Split Enz
(1)
Stand for Children
(1)
Stanford University
(3)
state education agency
(2)
State Fiscal Stabilization Funding
(1)
state policy
(1)
states
(1)
sticker shock
(1)
stimulus
(26)
Stuart Stotts
(1)
student
(6)
Student Aid and Fiscal Responsibility Act
(4)
StudentFirst
(1)
students
(15)
Susan Tedeschi
(1)
swine flu
(1)
swirling
(1)
Talent Transfer Initiative
(1)
Tammy Kolbe
(1)
taxes
(5)
Teach for America
(2)
TEACH grant
(2)
teacher
(37)
teacher assignment
(2)
teacher compensation
(3)
teacher distribution
(9)
teacher education
(5)
teacher effectiveness
(25)
teacher evaluation
(13)
teacher leadership
(1)
teacher mobility
(1)
teacher pay
(16)
teacher preparation
(4)
teacher quality
(38)
teacher recruitment
(4)
teacher residency
(2)
teacher tenure
(1)
teacher turnover
(1)
teacher union
(3)
Teachers for a New Era
(1)
teaching
(6)
teaching standards
(1)
TeamScience
(1)
Ted Kennedy
(3)
television
(1)
Temple University
(1)
Tennessee
(12)
tenure
(5)
Test
(1)
test scores
(2)
testing
(1)
Texas
(15)
TFA
(2)
Thanksgiving
(1)
The Decemberists
(1)
The Electric Company
(2)
Thomas DiPrete
(1)
Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology
(1)
TIAA-CREF
(1)
TIF
(1)
Tift Merritt
(2)
Tim Finn
(1)
Tim Russert
(1)
Tim Sass
(1)
TIME magazine
(3)
Title II
(3)
tobacco
(1)
Todd Gitlin
(1)
Tom Loveless
(1)
Tom Shales
(1)
Top Chef
(1)
Tory Miller
(1)
town gown
(1)
Tracy Grammer
(2)
transfer
(3)
Travis
(1)
Triple-A
(1)
tuition
(11)
U.S. Commission on Civil Rights
(1)
U.S. Department of Education
(46)
U.S. News and World Report
(2)
U.S. Senate
(2)
UDC
(1)
unions
(2)
university
(4)
University of California
(1)
University of Illinois
(2)
University of Michigan
(1)
University of Minnesota
(1)
University of the District of Columbia
(1)
University of Virginia
(1)
University of Wisconsin
(16)
University of Wisconsin-Madison
(41)
USA Today
(1)
Utah
(3)
UW System
(21)
UW-Madison
(42)
value added
(9)
Vermont
(3)
vice president
(4)
Vincent Gray
(1)
violence
(1)
Virginia
(1)
Virginia Commonwealth University
(1)
VIVA Project
(1)
voting
(1)
voucher
(8)
Wall Street Journal
(3)
Washington DC
(14)
Washington Post
(16)
Washington State
(5)
West Virginia
(3)
Why Tuesday?
(1)
Wilco
(1)
William Bennett
(1)
William Cronon
(2)
WIlliam Sewell
(1)
William T. Grant Foundation
(1)
WISCAPE
(1)
Wisconsin
(49)
Wisconsin Idea Partnership
(4)
Wisconsin Policy Research Institute
(1)
Wisconsin Scholars Longitudinal Study
(5)
Wisconsin technical colleges
(1)
WNCS
(1)
work
(1)
working conditions
(11)
working mother
(1)
WXPN
(1)
Wyoming
(2)

No comments:
Post a Comment