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Pike, Gary R.; Kuh, George D.; McCormick, Alexander C. – Research in Higher Education, 2011
This study examined the contingent relationships between learning community participation and student engagement in educational activities inside and outside the classroom using data from the 2004 administration of the National Survey of Student Engagement (NSSE). Results indicated that learning community participation was positively and…
Descriptors: Institutional Characteristics, Learner Engagement, Student Participation, College Students
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Pike, Gary R.; Kuh, George D.; McCormick, Alexander C.; Ethington, Corinna A.; Smart, John C. – Research in Higher Education, 2011
Calls for accountability in higher education are prompted in part by questions concerning whether colleges and universities use their resources effectively to promote student learning. Unfortunately, too little is known about whether money matters to desired outcomes of college. Using students' responses to the 2004 administration of the National…
Descriptors: Expenditures, College Students, Institutional Characteristics, Accountability
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McCormick, Alexander C.; Pike, Gary R.; Kuh, George D.; Chen, Pu-Shih Daniel – Research in Higher Education, 2009
This study compares the explanatory power of the 2000 edition of Carnegie Classification, the 2005 revision of the classification, and selected variables underlying Carnegie's expanded 2005 classification system using data from the National Survey of Student Engagement's spring 2004 administration. Results indicate that the 2000 and 2005…
Descriptors: College Students, Classification, Comparative Analysis, Student Surveys
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Pike, Gary R. – Research in Higher Education, 2006
Holland's theory of vocational preferences provides a powerful framework for studying students' college experiences. A basic proposition of Holland's theory is that individuals actively seek out and select environments that are congruent with their personality types. Although studies consistently support the self-selection proposition, they have…
Descriptors: Majors (Students), Personality, Expectation, Career Choice
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Pike, Gary R. – Research in Higher Education, 1995
A study evaluated the feasibility of using students' self-reports of academic development and college experiences as substitutes for standardized test scores (proxies) or policy indicators. Results suggested self-reports should be used with care as proxies for a national test but may be used as policy indicators for improvement of undergraduate…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Achievement Tests, College Students, Comparative Analysis
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Kasworm, Carol E.; Pike, Gary R. – Research in Higher Education, 1994
This study examined patterns of coursework and levels of involvement of 1,099 adult students to evaluate whether some key factors commonly used to predict undergraduate students' academic performance are appropriate for use with this population. Results suggest traditional models are inappropriate for this large and growing proportion of the…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Adult Students, Age Differences, College Students
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Pike, Gary R. – Research in Higher Education, 1991
A study used a latent variable model with various factors to examine the relationship between college student grades and satisfaction. Results suggest satisfaction is a stronger influence on grades than vice versa. It is recommended that popular recursive models be reevaluated because nonrecursive models may more accurately represent effects.…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, College Students, Grades (Scholastic), Higher Education
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Pike, Gary R. – Research in Higher Education, 1999
Research suggests correlations between student gains and college experiences may be an artifact of halo effect. A study examined whether halo error underlies students' self-reported gains, significance of the error, and its effect on the relationship between college experiences and educational outcomes. Results confirm halo error may be an…
Descriptors: Achievement Gains, College Outcomes Assessment, College Students, Higher Education
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Pike, Gary R. – Research in Higher Education, 1996
A study of 1,568 students in 10 2- and 4-year colleges and universities found that while students' self-reports of academic development and test scores developed from the same test specifications did measure the same constructs, the measures are not necessarily interchangeable. Analyses also produced ambiguous results concerning stability of…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Cognitive Development, College Students, Comparative Analysis