2. Cultural and Financial Forces Affect Students
Encourage students to develop skills, independence,
and competence
Difficult to Ascertain
Institutions with poor retention do not publicize data
4. Validation
Make Students Feel That Their Education is Worthwhile and Valuable
Departmental e-newsletters, campus Web sites, letters, personal interaction with
students
Mentoring
Some students need conversation beyond coursework advising
Offer constructive suggestions and encouragement
Academic advisors should really get involved with their students by listening
and setting goals and expectations and offer encouraging words
Recognition and Celebration
Publicly recognize student achievements with tweets, departmental
newsletters, emails, local media coverage
5. Give Students A Voice
Invite them to become ambassadors for their school
Have students speak to new or prospective students and share with them
their struggles and successes
Practicality
Allow students to work on assignments relevant to today’s world
A Culture of Success
Create a positive environment
Sponsor lectures with local community business leaders
Host campus mixers
Publicly recognize school’s accomplishments
6. Provide Resources
Provide web links to mental health support groups on and off
campus,
counseling centers, health clinics, hotlines; such as ULifeline,
Freedom From Fear
Offer job advice
Provide forums for students and faculty to contribute success
stories
Use electronic student newsletters
Twitter
7. Support
Make students feel that everyone is involved in their successful
completion of an education
For example: financial aid offices – create more payment options
Positivity
All personnel on campus including physical plant personnel,
housekeeping, secretaries communicate with students by
speaking and smiling when meeting them
Cardona, A (2009, April 24). Eight ways to retain students in a tough economy. The Chronicle of Higher
Education. Retrieved from http://chronicle.com/article/Eight-Ways-to-Retain-Studen/5437/
8. Conducted by The College Board Study on Student Retention, Project on Academic Success
at Indiana University at Bloomington, and the Center for Enrollment, Research, Policy, and
Practice (University of California)
N=442 Respondents
Results
Three-fourths had designated retention director
More commuter colleges than residential ones had retention directors
Sixty three percent had retention committee
Two-thirds reported coordinator had authority to carry out some projects
One-third reported coordinator had some budget authority to finance new initiatives
Ninety percent reported more than half of first year students participated in orientation
Supiano, B. (2009, November 1). Colleges move to organize their retention efforts.
The Chronicle of Higher Education. Retrieved from
http://chronicle.com/article/Colleges-Move-to-Organize-R/4899/
9. Two things in common
Administrators and faculty are focused on making
progress
Programs are geared toward helping students on an
individual basis
10. Report by Southern Regional Education Board
Fifteen public four year universities that enroll large
numbers of low income students improved their grad rates.
Efforts used by the participants in report
Training for faculty to improve student advising
First year experience programs
Early alert programs help advisors identify students who
might drop out
First Year Leader Program used by Murray State -
upperclassmen help freshmen adjust to campus life
(anchoring program)
Variety of other initiatives that work such as faculty and
community involvement
Fuller, A. (2010, April 14). Improving college completion in the South, one student at a time. The Chronicle of
Higher Education. Retrieved from http://chronicle.com/article/Improving-College-Completio/65049/
11. Address the problem of student departure as early as
possible
Concentrate efforts
◦ On admissions
◦ Early educational assessment
◦ Academic assistance
◦ Orientations
◦ Programs that focus on the student’s first year on campus
Tinto, V. (1987, November). The Principles of Effective Retention. Paper
presented at the Fall Conference of the Maryland Personnel Association,
Largo, MD.