determinants to retain students during the first year of university studies

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Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences 116 (2014) 2630 – 2634 1877-0428 © 2013 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. Selection and/or peer-review under responsibility of Academic World Education and Research Center. doi:10.1016/j.sbspro.2014.01.625 ScienceDirect 5 th World Conference on Educational Sciences - WCES 2013 Determinants to retain students during the first year of university studies Ana María Graffigna a *, María de los Ángeles Morell a , María Laura Simonassi b , Analía Morales b a Universidad Católica de Cuyo. Facultad de Educación. Av. José I. de la Roza 1516 oeste Rivadavia. San Juan 5400. Argentina b Universidad Católica de Cuyo. Facultad de Ciencias de la Alimentación, Bioquímicas y Farmacéuticas. Av. José I. de la Roza 1516 oeste Rivadavia. San Juan 5400. Argentina Abstract The entry and stay of students in college is a decision that is influenced by familiar, educational, cultural, social, economic, political, institutional, academic, and pedagogical aspects. In this sense, the possibility of continuing studying arises not as linear or unicausal process but as derived from the way the social, institutional, educational and didactic dimensions intersect and interplay (Mastache, A. et al, 2005 ). If we look primarily to socioeconomic factors there are approaches that relate the material living conditions with socio-cultural conditions. The first are observed through income, type of housing, family composition, parents' occupational categories. The latter, through the parents' educational level, education’s perceived value, language patterns, study and leisure habits, access to cultural goods. All these factors, combined with institutional variables, set the most frequent context of dropout rates. Keywords: retention, graduation rate, college entrance 1. Academic institutional determinants: Core concepts The adjective academic answers to the usual use of the term, that is, to refer to higher education activities, as to aspects of pedagogical-didactic dimension in university classrooms. "Academic" has several meanings; it specifies the level of schooling that we are referring to: the higher level, and more specifically the university level, with its vast secular functions (teaching, research, extension). Academic: applies to courses or degrees obtained in higher education institutions. The academic-institutional determinants (Danegger Ruiz, C. 2000), signal as the object of study the events of the higher education classroom in their pedagogical-didactic dimension. These determinants are both determined by the * Corresponding Author: Ana María Graffigna. Tel.: +0054-0264-4292384 E-mail address: [email protected] Available online at www.sciencedirect.com © 2013 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. Selection and/or peer-review under responsibility of Academic World Education and Research Center.

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Page 1: Determinants to Retain Students During the First Year of University Studies

Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences 116 ( 2014 ) 2630 – 2634

1877-0428 © 2013 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.Selection and/or peer-review under responsibility of Academic World Education and Research Center.doi: 10.1016/j.sbspro.2014.01.625

ScienceDirect

5th World Conference on Educational Sciences - WCES 2013

Determinants to retain students during the first year of university studies

Ana María Graffignaa *, María de los Ángeles Morella, María Laura Simonassib, Analía Morales b

aUniversidad Católica de Cuyo. Facultad de Educación. Av. José I. de la Roza 1516 oeste Rivadavia. San Juan 5400. Argentina

bUniversidad Católica de Cuyo. Facultad de Ciencias de la Alimentación, Bioquímicas y Farmacéuticas. Av. José I. de la Roza 1516 oeste Rivadavia. San Juan 5400. Argentina

Abstract

The entry and stay of students in college is a decision that is influenced by familiar, educational, cultural, social, economic, political, institutional, academic, and pedagogical aspects. In this sense, the possibility of continuing studying arises not as linear or unicausal process but as derived from the way the social, institutional, educational and didactic dimensions intersect and interplay (Mastache, A. et al, 2005 ). If we look primarily to socioeconomic factors there are approaches that relate the material living conditions with socio-cultural conditions. The first are observed through income, type of housing, family composition, parents' occupational categories. The latter, through the parents' educational level, education’s perceived value, language patterns, study and leisure habits, access to cultural goods. All these factors, combined with institutional variables, set the most frequent context of dropout rates.

Keywords: retention, graduation rate, college entrance

1. Academic institutional determinants: Core concepts

The adjective academic answers to the usual use of the term, that is, to refer to higher education activities, as to aspects of pedagogical-didactic dimension in university classrooms. "Academic" has several meanings; it specifies the level of schooling that we are referring to: the higher level, and more specifically the university level, with its vast secular functions (teaching, research, extension). Academic: applies to courses or degrees obtained in higher education institutions.

The academic-institutional determinants (Danegger Ruiz, C. 2000), signal as the object of study the events of the higher education classroom in their pedagogical-didactic dimension. These determinants are both determined by the

* Corresponding Author: Ana María Graffigna. Tel.: +0054-0264-4292384 E-mail address: [email protected]

Available online at www.sciencedirect.com

© 2013 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.Selection and/or peer-review under responsibility of Academic World Education and Research Center.

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2631 Ana María Graffi gna et al. / Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences 116 ( 2014 ) 2630 – 2634

available materials and the academic traditions (Quiroz, 1991) and determinants of the contract that students enter or sign an agreement with the institution when they start university (Entwistle, 1988).

Alfiz (2001) defines the institution as a set of forms and social structures that regulate relationships, preexist individuals and impose themselves to it. Lidia Fernández (1998) refers to the Educational Institution as "a cultural object that expresses a certain amount of social power (...) the institution expresses the possibility of the group or collective to regulate individual behavior." This author proposes a descriptive outline of the institution, stemming from:

- A comprehensive set of human beings and their particular form of organization - A set of cultural productions that seek to support this organization because it has been proven useful - Some processes that enable this support: socialization and social control - An inevitable tension between the desires of individuals and the need to adapt them to the social form admitted - A set of social productions intended to convince and generate the decision that requires the sacrifice of

individual desire on behalf of the collective stability. The formal structure of the institution is shaped by the actors, organigram, rules- what is instituted; while the

operating modes that are hidden or obscured to the observer make up the instituting. From this perspective, the institutional dynamic is the ongoing relationship between the instituted (the fixed and

stable) and the instituting (the questioning, the criticism and the opposing or transforming proposal). The 'institutional style' refers to certain aspects or qualities of the institutional action which, by repetition,

characterize the establishment as responsible in some way for producing, causing judgments and images, facing and solving problems, interacting with the material, interpersonal and symbolic world, keeping certain conceptions, etc.; it is the mediator between the 'conditions' and the 'results'.

The 'conditions' constitute all the pre-existing aspects of the phenomenon under study that establish a relationship of determination with it. The 'results' are the objects derived from the institutional production at material and symbolic levels. The students’ prevailing conditions suffer the intermediation of the institutional style; so that the same conditions are received, interpreted, valued and responded in ways that are sometimes diametrically opposed in different establishments (Fernandez, 1998).

2. Methodology

The present study is of exploratory, descriptive and comparative nature. It employs a qualitative-quantitative mixed methodological approach, with the addition and complementarity of data and information obtained in the field. The techniques and instruments used include surveys and focused interviews with key informants. A total of 137 students were surveyed and interviewed, out of which twenty-six (26) belong to the Bachelor’s in Pedagogical Psychology Degree; thirty (30) to the Teaching Programme; seventeen (17) to Pharmacy and sixty-four (64) to the Bachelor’s in Biochemistry Degree.

For data collection the following techniques were used: a) Semi-structured individual survey: applied to freshmen of 1st and 2nd year of the careers previously mentioned b) collection of data from the institutional assessment survey addressed to students c) Observation of documents: students’ personal data and academic status; d) In-depth interview to students and teachers.

3. Findings and results

3.1. Characterization of the student population

Most of the students are single, and live with both parents in families with no more than three children. There are also some cases of students who live well with other members, such as grandparents, uncles, nephews or children of their own. Although they are not a relevant factor in both groups of entrants, it is important to consider given that this raises due to the differences in the family structure where the student coexists.

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Some studies indicate that the level of education of the mother, in particular, seems to have a greater influence, since in most homes the mother is primarily responsible for the education of children, therefore the greater her level of education over her children, she will instill the need to continue studying (Mari-Klose et al 2009). Given the above, there are differences in both groups, since about a third of mothers and about 50% of the students’ fathers who enrolled in the Faculty of Biochemical and Pharmaceutical Sciences have a higher level of education, while 36% of mothers and only 17% of students’ fathers from the Faculty of Education have a high level of education. Most of the mothers of these students are in the middle (41%) and students’ fathers at a low level (46%). Regarding the employment status of the students’ fathers, it is observed that 98% of students’ fathers of both groups have a job. As regards mothers, just under half (48%), in the case of students who are in the Faculty of Education and 33% of the mothers of the ones enrolled in the Faculty of Biochemical and Pharmaceutical Sciences, work as housewives. Taking into account the time spent on studies, representing an opportunity cost because since a part-time academic results can may harm or mean a delay to complete the studies, it was found that only about 27% (Faculty of Education) and 10 % (Faculty of Biochemical and Pharmaceutical Sciences) of the students spend part of their time to work and study, as the source of family income comes mainly in two groups, the work of parents (70% in the case of the Faculty of Education entrants and 90 % for those of the Faculty of Biochemical and Pharmaceutical Science). According to data collected in both faculties, most of the students devote less than 10 hours a week out of the few students who work. 3.2. Academic and institutional determinants

3.1.1. Structural aspects of the institution Regarding the space, time and groupings, it is possible to notice some difficulties impeding permanence. Students

say that the teaching hours are many times inconvenient to meet the academic obligations provided. Specifically, times without activity between different subjects are mentioned, schedule changes or absence of teachers who do not communicate promptly to students, in the careers related to chemical science the demand for double shift completed is added, that impacts the declining time to develop self-study.

Regarding space, in careers related to the human science there is some unease as regards the distance between the place of studies and administration of the Faculty, students also reported feeling isolated from the university community. These statements are significant, particularly when compared with chemical science students, who attend off-campus but do not have any discomfort about it. This aspect, which appears particularly relevant in the career of psychopedagogy, it seems to be hindering also shared by the teachers, who are the drivers of the concern that the students are spokespersons.

3.1.2. Links and social networks that are established within the institution The links that are prioritized and appear to be stronger are the ones related to peer group, student assistants and

teachers. The students that are in the selected careers positively value the relationship with teachers, considering that the main characteristic is containment, openness to dialogue. In pharmacy and biochemistry there is a good social integration in terms of good understanding with the university community and the relationship with teachers and peers.

3.1.3. Curriculum Structure It was observed that, in careers related to human science during the 1st year there are more curricular activities,

although the workload of the curriculum is less than the careers of chemical sciences, while the latter had a greater number of semiannual subjects .

Students coming from human science expressed difficulty regarding the correlative system, which has been measured at the moment of registration in second year, showing lack of knowledge on this aspect. From the

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chemical sciences, while recognizing that the system was explained to them, they admit having failed and they recognize it at the moment they study the subjects of the second semester.

It is also perceived as an obstacle the percentage of attendance demanded in relation with the qualifications that must be obtained in the mid-term exams.

98% of the students surveyed in the Faculty of Biochemical and Pharmaceutical Sciences know the Career Syllabus, while the Faculty of Education only 82% knows it, then between 91 and 93% of students in both faculties know the conditions of regularity of the subjects being studied. Regarding the correlativity of the career 80% is recognized in the Faculty of Biochemical and Pharmaceutical Sciences and a smaller percentage, 68% in Faculty of Education. As regards the system of excemption from the final exam and instances of final exams, in both faculties it is known by 90% approximately. Finally, the instances of sitting for the mid term exams again are known by 66% in the Faculty of Education and 69% in the Faculty of Biochemical and Pharmaceutical Sciences.

3.1.4. Institutional Interactions The students interviewed expressed keeping little or no interaction with the actors responsible for the Institutional

Administration, however it is possible to discern a relationship between teachers and directors of study. This situation constitutes an important aspect for the management as it gives meaning to the mediation of the director of study as a key actor for the institutional life. However, in interviews students clearly show that the relationship with the authorities may appear when there are “problems” or “conflicts” that have to be talked or solved by the authority, these statements show the need that the people in charge of the administration or management promote other exchanges apart from those related to conflict resolution. Students express that there are not adequate formal communication mechanisms, many times contrary information is received from different channels, making this an issue that hinders the students to stay. It attaches special importance to the support received from the peer group in circumstances where students were on the verge of dropping out. The possibility to take part in activities designed from this area which may favor the sense of belonging of the student towards the institution is not observed.

4. Conclusions and recommendations

The work focuses on the socialization process that involves university that the student must perform a conversion process in order to fit in the culture with respect to the new level and the institution to which he/she is enrolling.

From the analyzed data, the need to create institutional actions that promote the understanding of the inherent roles in the education system and the specific institution to which the student is enrolling. At this point it is essential to take into consideration the academic socialization process as a period which is the passage through three stages: a) the estrangement period, which for the student means joining an unknown institutional universe, b) the time of learning, in which the processes of progressive adaptation to the new institutional rules is developed, c) the time of affiliation, which involves the mastery of the new rules. Transit through these stages, involves the fact that the student must perform a conversion process to become "native" with respect to the new level and the institution to which he/she is enrolling.

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