are students dropping out or dragging out the college experience? & modeling the enrollment...

28
School of Business School of Business Are Students Dropping Out or Dragging Out the College Experience? & Modeling the Enrollment Path Leslie S. Stratton & James N. Wetzel Virginia Commonwealth University Research funded in large part by an AIR Research Grant 2012 Presentation at NEAIR Conference

Upload: lara

Post on 22-Feb-2016

18 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Are Students Dropping Out or Dragging Out the College Experience? & Modeling the Enrollment Path. Leslie S. Stratton & James N. Wetzel Virginia Commonwealth University Research funded in large part by an AIR Research Grant 2012 Presentation at NEAIR Conference. Plan. Motivation - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Are Students Dropping Out or Dragging Out the College Experience?   & Modeling the Enrollment Path

School of BusinessSchool of Business

Are Students Dropping Out or Dragging Out the College

Experience? &Modeling the Enrollment Path

Leslie S. Stratton & James N. Wetzel

Virginia Commonwealth UniversityResearch funded in large part by an AIR Research Grant

2012 Presentation at NEAIR Conference

Page 2: Are Students Dropping Out or Dragging Out the College Experience?   & Modeling the Enrollment Path

School of Business

Plan•Motivation•Briefly review some literature •Data•Goals of each paper•Results of Paper #1•Results of Paper #2•Conclusion

Page 3: Are Students Dropping Out or Dragging Out the College Experience?   & Modeling the Enrollment Path

School of Business

Motivation•Completion rates are a concern.

▫ Enrollment is up, but graduation rate is unchanged (63%). 45% for African Americans, 54% for Hispanics, 54% for low

income, and 53% for first generation college students. •Benefits accrue primarily upon graduation. •Costs are incurred upon enrollment.

▫Shared by students/families and public.•Dept of Education is targeting schools with

low graduation rates.

Page 4: Are Students Dropping Out or Dragging Out the College Experience?   & Modeling the Enrollment Path

School of Business

Literature•Studies of college outcomes are

proliferating. •Many control for socioeconomic status:

▫ Paulsen, St. John (2002), Swail, Cabrera, Lee (2004), Ishitani (2003, 2006), Titus (2006), … review by Kuh et al. (2006)

& find these populations are disadvantaged.

•Controlling for academic background is even more important ▫ Adelman 2004, Carneiro & Heckman 2002 find

background trumps race/ethnicity.

Page 5: Are Students Dropping Out or Dragging Out the College Experience?   & Modeling the Enrollment Path

School of Business

Literature•But, many studies are

▫based on data from 1 university,▫do not adequately control for academic

background, or▫designate success as graduation within a

particular time horizon.•Not all those who have not graduated in X

years have given up. •Many students enroll PT, stop out,

transfer.

Page 6: Are Students Dropping Out or Dragging Out the College Experience?   & Modeling the Enrollment Path

School of Business

Contributions of 1st Paper• Multi-institution study.• Controls for SES & academic

background/ability.• Distinguishes between those not enrolled and

those still enrolled at 6 year mark.

2nd Paper • Also controls for enrollment path.

Page 7: Are Students Dropping Out or Dragging Out the College Experience?   & Modeling the Enrollment Path

School of Business

Data•1996/2001 US Beginning Postsecondary

Survey•National sample of those beginning in

1995-96 academic year. •Restrict sample to those:

▫Who are followed through 2001▫Who initially attend 4 year institutions▫Who are age 23- & from US

•Sample of about 5820 students.

Page 8: Are Students Dropping Out or Dragging Out the College Experience?   & Modeling the Enrollment Path

School of Business

Research Questions: Paper #1•Most studies compare graduates with

non-graduates, BUT•1) How common is persistence at the 6

year mark? •2) How does distinguishing between

those still enrolled and those not enrolled alter results of college outcome models?

Page 9: Are Students Dropping Out or Dragging Out the College Experience?   & Modeling the Enrollment Path

School of Business

Covariates I•Demographics:

▫Gender▫Race/Ethnicity▫Age ▫Marital status ▫Parental status▫Parents’ education▫Household income

Page 10: Are Students Dropping Out or Dragging Out the College Experience?   & Modeling the Enrollment Path

School of Business

Covariates II•Academic background/ability:

▫Standardized test scores▫High school GPA▫High school program of study

•Unemployment rate.

All observed at time of matriculation.

Page 11: Are Students Dropping Out or Dragging Out the College Experience?   & Modeling the Enrollment Path

School of Business

Question 1: How common is persistence at the 6 year mark?

•63.2% have graduated.•23.4% are not enrolled.•13.4% are still enrolled.

•36% of those who have not graduated are still enrolled in last term observed!

•Persistence is common!

Page 12: Are Students Dropping Out or Dragging Out the College Experience?   & Modeling the Enrollment Path

School of Business

Question 2: How does controlling for persistence alter

outcome models?•Standard analyses use logit specification

to distinguish between graduates and non-graduates.

•We use a MNL model to distinguish among 3 outcomes: graduation, persistence, drop out.

Page 13: Are Students Dropping Out or Dragging Out the College Experience?   & Modeling the Enrollment Path

School of Business

Distinguishing between Persistence and Non-Enrollment is

Important• Statistically persistence is a distinct state. • Results by SES:

▫Disadvantaged students are less likely to graduate.

▫Hispanics are persisting. ▫1st Generation college students are dropping

out.▫African Americans and Women are split. ▫Lower income students have mixed results.

Page 14: Are Students Dropping Out or Dragging Out the College Experience?   & Modeling the Enrollment Path

School of Business

Distinguishing between Persistence and Non-Enrollment is

Important• Biggest Factors = Academic Background

▫Those with less than stellar high school GPAs are substantially less likely to have graduated. Between 15 and 25% of these non-graduates are

still enrolled. ▫Math background and SAT scores have a

smaller marginal effect on graduation, but a similar association with persistence.

Page 15: Are Students Dropping Out or Dragging Out the College Experience?   & Modeling the Enrollment Path

School of Business

Evidence re-Graduation• Analysis of similar sample from

Baccalaureate and Beyond survey suggests half of those still enrolled may graduate within a few years.

• Analyses of college outcomes should look at persistence!

• Is ‘dragging out’ worthwhile?

Page 16: Are Students Dropping Out or Dragging Out the College Experience?   & Modeling the Enrollment Path

School of Business

Why the Differences? •Enrollment paths are different.

▫Hispanics are more likely to enroll part-time.

▫Income/household constraints may favor part-time or stop out behavior.

▫Less prepared students may take more remedial classes, fewer courses/term.

•Can only address this by modeling path as well as outcome 2nd Paper.

Page 17: Are Students Dropping Out or Dragging Out the College Experience?   & Modeling the Enrollment Path

School of Business

What Path Looks Like•Initial Enrollment

▫~ 4% Part-time, 96% Full-time.•1 Year Mark

▫~ 11% Not Enrolled, 4% Part-time, 85% Full-time.

•3 Year Mark▫~19% NT, 7% PT, 71% FT, and 2%

Graduated. •5 Year Mark

▫~ 22% NT, 5% PT, 13% FT, and 60% Graduated.

Page 18: Are Students Dropping Out or Dragging Out the College Experience?   & Modeling the Enrollment Path

School of Business

What Path Looks Like

0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5 5.50%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

Enrollment Status over TimeWeighted

Grad

FT

PT

NT

Years following Matriculation

Page 19: Are Students Dropping Out or Dragging Out the College Experience?   & Modeling the Enrollment Path

School of Business

A Discrete Time Hazard of Enrollment

• Takes initial FT/PT enrollment decision as given. • Models transitions from:

▫FT to FT, PT, NT, & graduation▫PT to FT, PT, NT, & graduation▫NT to FT, PT, & NT.

• Graduation is treated as an absorbing state.

Page 20: Are Students Dropping Out or Dragging Out the College Experience?   & Modeling the Enrollment Path

School of Business

Specification• Uses a MNL specification to model these

movements.

• Models transitions from state j to state k as a function of ▫X = individual specific & matriculation

characteristics, ▫Wt = time varying covariates,▫Zt = past behavior, & ▫Θ captures unobserved heterogeneity.

Page 21: Are Students Dropping Out or Dragging Out the College Experience?   & Modeling the Enrollment Path

School of Business

Specification▫X includes ~ all covariates from paper 1 + info

on first term attended (PT/FT, Spring/Fall, Semester/Quarter, …),

▫Wt includes unemployment level and change, college grades, family chars,

▫Zt includes quadratic in time spent enrolled PT, FT, NT in past, &

▫Θ is iid normal.

Page 22: Are Students Dropping Out or Dragging Out the College Experience?   & Modeling the Enrollment Path

School of Business

Results: Predicted Path•Fixes Wt – College grades generally rise.

•Initial Enrollment: Fixed.•1 Year Mark

▫~ 12% Not Enrolled, 5% Part-time, 83% Full-time.

•3 Year Mark▫~20% NT, 7% PT, 72% FT, and 2% Graduated.

•5 Year Mark

▫~ 27% NT, 6% PT, 17% FT, and 50% Graduated.

More NT & FT, Less Graduated

Page 23: Are Students Dropping Out or Dragging Out the College Experience?   & Modeling the Enrollment Path

School of Business

Results: Predicted Path

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 350%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

Predicted Enrollment StatusUR Changes

Grad

FT

PT

NT

Time

Page 24: Are Students Dropping Out or Dragging Out the College Experience?   & Modeling the Enrollment Path

School of Business

Results: Socio-economic indicators• Hispanics spend more time PT and NT than non-

Hispanics.• 1st Gen spend more time PT and NT than non-1st

Gen. • Blacks spend more time FT, but less time NT

than whites.• Those from lower income HHs, spend more time

NT.

• Even controlling for path, all have a lower probability of graduating.

Page 25: Are Students Dropping Out or Dragging Out the College Experience?   & Modeling the Enrollment Path

School of Business

Results: Educational Background• Still much more important, especially high

school grades.• Low performers spend less time FT, more NT and

PT.

• Controlling for path, effect on probability of graduation is modest.

Page 26: Are Students Dropping Out or Dragging Out the College Experience?   & Modeling the Enrollment Path

School of Business

Results: Unemployment Rate•Both level of unemployment and recent

changes are significant. •Consistent with an opportunity cost

argument:• A lower level of unemployment increases NT,

while decreasing PT & FT. Little change in graduation rate.

• Decreases in the unemployment rate appear to reduce PT enrollment and speed graduation.

Page 27: Are Students Dropping Out or Dragging Out the College Experience?   & Modeling the Enrollment Path

School of Business

General Conclusions • Persistence 6 years after matriculation is

substantial and should be recognized and studied. - Is dragging out the college experience wise?

• Enrollment paths constitute a complex problem. ▫Disadvantaged groups appear to have lower

graduation rates, even controlling for path. ▫Academic background may play a greater role

in driving the path rather than the outcome. ▫Economic conditions will change paths and

outcomes.

Page 28: Are Students Dropping Out or Dragging Out the College Experience?   & Modeling the Enrollment Path

School of Business

Questions?