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Page 1: A Longitudinal Analysis of the College Transfer Pathway at McMaster Karen Menard Ying Liu Jin Zhang Marzena Kielar Office of Institutional Research and
Page 2: A Longitudinal Analysis of the College Transfer Pathway at McMaster Karen Menard Ying Liu Jin Zhang Marzena Kielar Office of Institutional Research and

A Longitudinal Analysis of the College Transfer Pathway at McMaster

Karen MenardYing Liu

Jin ZhangMarzena Kielar

Office of Institutional Research and Analysis, McMaster University

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Pathways in Higher Education Conference, Toronto, January 27, 2012

Page 3: A Longitudinal Analysis of the College Transfer Pathway at McMaster Karen Menard Ying Liu Jin Zhang Marzena Kielar Office of Institutional Research and

Overview of the Literature•College transfer students are disadvantaged in terms of degree attainment. The impacting factors are:

•Cultural

•Goal of education

•Education cost

•Social economic background

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Page 4: A Longitudinal Analysis of the College Transfer Pathway at McMaster Karen Menard Ying Liu Jin Zhang Marzena Kielar Office of Institutional Research and

•College transfer students are more likely to be non-traditional (older, part-time, commuter)

•More likely to drop out than traditional students

•Outside environmental factors play a more significant role than to traditional students

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Overview of the Literature

Page 5: A Longitudinal Analysis of the College Transfer Pathway at McMaster Karen Menard Ying Liu Jin Zhang Marzena Kielar Office of Institutional Research and

•Further factors affecting college transfer students:

•Challenges: academic standards, university size, location, and competition among students

•Opportunities: faculty/staff advice, career counselling, transfer readiness, and graduation requirements

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Overview of the Literature

Page 6: A Longitudinal Analysis of the College Transfer Pathway at McMaster Karen Menard Ying Liu Jin Zhang Marzena Kielar Office of Institutional Research and

Research Focus

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•What are the differences between college transfer and direct entry

•What factors impact the progression of college transfer compared to direct entry

•Longitudinal perspective: factors affecting college transfer students

Page 7: A Longitudinal Analysis of the College Transfer Pathway at McMaster Karen Menard Ying Liu Jin Zhang Marzena Kielar Office of Institutional Research and

Methodology

•Eight cohorts of undergraduate students entering directly from high school and college (2000 - 2007)

•Each cohort followed from entrance to 2009/10

•Both time-invariant and time-variant variables are included

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Page 8: A Longitudinal Analysis of the College Transfer Pathway at McMaster Karen Menard Ying Liu Jin Zhang Marzena Kielar Office of Institutional Research and

Potential Impacting Factors

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– Average grade– Student loans– Student grants

Time invariant variables

Time variant variables

Page 9: A Longitudinal Analysis of the College Transfer Pathway at McMaster Karen Menard Ying Liu Jin Zhang Marzena Kielar Office of Institutional Research and

Demographic Distribution of Data

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Page 10: A Longitudinal Analysis of the College Transfer Pathway at McMaster Karen Menard Ying Liu Jin Zhang Marzena Kielar Office of Institutional Research and

Progression Status as of 2009

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Page 11: A Longitudinal Analysis of the College Transfer Pathway at McMaster Karen Menard Ying Liu Jin Zhang Marzena Kielar Office of Institutional Research and

Graduation by Term Distribution

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Page 12: A Longitudinal Analysis of the College Transfer Pathway at McMaster Karen Menard Ying Liu Jin Zhang Marzena Kielar Office of Institutional Research and

Probability of Persistence

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Direct Entry

College Transfer

Page 13: A Longitudinal Analysis of the College Transfer Pathway at McMaster Karen Menard Ying Liu Jin Zhang Marzena Kielar Office of Institutional Research and

What are the differences between college transfer vs. direct entry

• 2000 to 2006 cohort (followed for at least 4 years)

• 1612 from college, 28680 direct from high school

• Multinomial logistic regression model

• Dependent variable: student outcome with three nominal categorical levels: graduation, dropout, and persistence (reference level)

• Tested various models• Model: further control gender, admission average, and financial support

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(1)

Page 14: A Longitudinal Analysis of the College Transfer Pathway at McMaster Karen Menard Ying Liu Jin Zhang Marzena Kielar Office of Institutional Research and

Results• Students with any of following features are more likely to

graduate:

• Younger students

• Female

• Full-time

• From Ontario

• Receiving higher amount of loan

• Higher session average grade

• College transfer

• Model global test: Χ2 (LR)=14331, df=52, p<0.0001, Pseudo R2 =34.3%

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Page 15: A Longitudinal Analysis of the College Transfer Pathway at McMaster Karen Menard Ying Liu Jin Zhang Marzena Kielar Office of Institutional Research and

Major factors affecting college transfer students over time

•1903 from college (2000 to 2007 cohorts)

•Time variant discrete proportion hazard models

•Events: graduation and dropout, persistence as right censoring

•Dependent variable: number of registered terms

• Independent variables: all 12 variables including time variant ones

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Page 16: A Longitudinal Analysis of the College Transfer Pathway at McMaster Karen Menard Ying Liu Jin Zhang Marzena Kielar Office of Institutional Research and

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– Average grade– Student loans– Student grants

Time invariant variables

Time variant variables

Page 17: A Longitudinal Analysis of the College Transfer Pathway at McMaster Karen Menard Ying Liu Jin Zhang Marzena Kielar Office of Institutional Research and

• College transfer students are more likely to drop out if they have the following features:

• Older

• Part-time

• Low session average grade

• Majored in specific areas

• When separating full-time and part-time, age does not affect part-time dropout

• Model global test: Χ2 (LR)=718, df=25, p<0.0001, Pseudo R2 =7.9%

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Results

Page 18: A Longitudinal Analysis of the College Transfer Pathway at McMaster Karen Menard Ying Liu Jin Zhang Marzena Kielar Office of Institutional Research and

Summary of Findings

• More college transfer students were part-time and they were older on average

• Overall graduation rate of college transfer students was lower and dropout rate was higher than direct entry students

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Page 19: A Longitudinal Analysis of the College Transfer Pathway at McMaster Karen Menard Ying Liu Jin Zhang Marzena Kielar Office of Institutional Research and

However

• A young college transfer student who enrolls in full-time status is as likely to graduate as a direct entry student

• Further control other variables, college transfer students are more likely to graduate than direct entry students

• College transfer students with lower grades are less likely to graduate

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Page 20: A Longitudinal Analysis of the College Transfer Pathway at McMaster Karen Menard Ying Liu Jin Zhang Marzena Kielar Office of Institutional Research and

Implications• Academic performance is nevertheless a very important impacting factor

• Age and registration status causes the retention issues through many mediating factors

• Ensure the appropriate institutional supports (student services, academic, etc) for university

• Policies need to support program transfers and collaborative programs

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Page 21: A Longitudinal Analysis of the College Transfer Pathway at McMaster Karen Menard Ying Liu Jin Zhang Marzena Kielar Office of Institutional Research and

Thank You

•A Modeling Degree Attainment of College Transfer Students at a Four-year Canadian Institution Abstract is available upon request

•Email: [email protected]

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