Piecing Together the Student Success Puzzle: Research, Propositions, and
Recommendations - ASHE Higher Education Report
Book description
Creating the conditions that foster student success in college has
never been more important. As many as four-fifths of high school
graduates need some form of postsecondary education to be economically
self-sufficient and manage the increasingly complex social, political,
and cultural issues of the 21st century. But about 40 percent of those
who start college fail to earn a degree within 6 or 8 years, an
unacceptably low number.
This report examines the complicated array of social, economic,
cultural and educational factors related to student success in
college, defined as academic achievement, engagement in
educationally purposeful activities, satisfaction, acquisition of
desired knowledge, skills and competencies, persistence, and
attainment of educational objectives.
Although the trajectory for academic success in college is
established long before students matriculate, most institutions can do
more than they are at present to shape how students prepared for
college and they they engage in productive activities after they arrive.
This is the 5th issue of the 32nd volume of the Jossey-Bass series
ASHE Higher Education Report. Each monograph is the
definitive analysis of a tough higher education problem, based on
thorough research of pertinent literature and institutional
experiences. Topics are identified by a national survey. Noted
practitioners and scholars are then commissioned to write the reports,
with experts providing critical reviews of each manuscript before
publication.