"High Risk" Students and Higher Education : Future Trends / Dionne J. Jones and Betty Collier Watson.

Student attrition is a major problem for American colleges and universities because an increasing number of enrollees fit the demographic and socioeconomic profile of "high-risk" students, who consist in general of minorities, the academically disadvantaged, the disabled, and those of low socioecono...

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Bibliographic Details
Uniform Title:ERIC digest.
Main Authors: Jones, Dionne J.
Watson, Betty Collier (Author)
Corporate Authors: ERIC Clearinghouse on Higher Education
George Washington University
Language:English
Published: Washington, DC : ERIC Clearinghouse on Higher Education, 1990.
Series:ERIC digest.
Subjects:
Genre:
Physical Description:3 pages.
Format: Microfilm Book
Description
Summary:
Student attrition is a major problem for American colleges and universities because an increasing number of enrollees fit the demographic and socioeconomic profile of "high-risk" students, who consist in general of minorities, the academically disadvantaged, the disabled, and those of low socioeconomic status. Declining enrollments leave institutions with unused building capacity, increased costs per student, funding difficulties, and increasing pressure to lessen the difficulty of the curriculum, thus undermining the school's academic significance. Understanding attrition and risk is critical to achieving success among the high-risk group by the 21st cdntury. Most students begin school with positive attitudes; however, differences in race, gender, and social class often begin to emerge in early childhood education and increase through high school and college. Through negative conditioning, such as prejudice and lack of understanding among teachers towards the "different" student, low self-esteem is unintentionally created and nurtured. This low self-esteem can in time force students to "cooperate" with forces that create antisocial behavior and influence the drop-out mentality when circumstances become difficult to deal with. High-risk students must be challenged to develop academic and non-academic skills and competencies associated with success in college, and teachers, counselors, and administrators must persist in seeing that programs are completed through appropriate nurturing behavior. Contains five references. (GLR)
Note:Availability: ASHE-ERIC Higher Education Reports, The George Washington University, One Dupont Circle, Suite 630, Washington, DC 20036-1183 ($1.00).
Sponsoring Agency: Office of Educational Research and Improvement (edition), Washington, DC.
Contract Number: RI88062014.
ERIC Note: For the report on which this digest is based, see edition 321 726.
Microform.
Call Number:ED325033 Microfiche
Audience:
Administrators. ericd
Practitioners. ericd
Reproduction Note:
Microfiche. [Washington D.C.]: ERIC Clearinghouse microfiches : positive.