WWC review of this study

The impact of a first-year orientation course on at-risk students at a large, public research university (Doctoral dissertation).

Walls, L. L. (2000). Available from ProQuest Dissertations and Theses database. (UMI No. 9988482).

  •  examining 
    324
     Students
    , grade
    PS

Reviewed: June 2021

At least one finding shows promising evidence of effectiveness
At least one statistically significant positive finding
Meets WWC standards with reservations
Academic achievement outcomes—Statistically significant positive effect found for the domain
Outcome
measure
Comparison Period Sample Intervention
mean
Comparison
mean
Significant? Improvement
    index
Evidence
tier

GPA in First Year

Freshman orientation vs. Business as usual

1 Year

Full sample;
324 students

2.60

2.41

Yes

 
 
9
 


Evidence Tier rating based solely on this study. This intervention may achieve a higher tier when combined with the full body of evidence.

Characteristics of study sample as reported by study author.


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    Alabama

Setting

The study was conducted at Auburn University, a large public research university in the Southeastern United States.

Study sample

Limited descriptive information about the sample is provided. However, the sample included first-year college students and approximately 40 percent of them were deemed to be academically at-risk. Students were considered to be at-risk if they had either a high school GPA of 2.75 or less or an ACT total score of 20 or less.

Intervention Group

The intervention was a single, two-hour orientation course designed to help first year students succeed. The course was designed to encourage student involvement and sense of belonging within the university community.

Comparison Group

Comparison students did not participate in the orientation course.

Support for implementation

No implementation details were provided.

Reviewed: July 2016



Evidence Tier rating based solely on this study. This intervention may achieve a higher tier when combined with the full body of evidence.

Study sample characteristics were not reported.
 

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