Predicting Higher Education Graduation Rates from Institutional Characteristics and Resource Allocation

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

2004-01-01

Authors

Hamrick, Florence
Schuh, John
Shelley, MackOrcid icon

publication.page.majorProfessor

Advisors

publication.page.committeeMember

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Citations

Altmetric:
Altmetric::

Abstract

This study incorporated institutional characteristics (e.g., Carnegie type, selectivity) and resource allocations (e.g., instructional expenditures, student affairs expenditures) into a statistical model to predict undergraduate graduation rates. Instructional expenditures, library expenditures, and a number of institutional classification variables were significant predictors of graduation rates. Based on these results, recommendations as well as warranted cautions are included about allocating academic financial resources to optimize graduation rates

Series Number

Journal Issue

relationships.isVersionOf

Versions

Subject Categories

Type

article

publication.page.comments

<p>This article is from <em>Education Policy Analysis Archives</em> 12 (2004):1, <a href="http://dx.doi.org/10.14507/epaa.v12n19.2004" target="_blank">doi:10.14507/epaa.v12n19.2004</a>. Posted with permission</p>

Rights Statement

Copyright

Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 UTC 2004

Funding

Subject Categories

Supplemental Resources

item.source.page.uri

Collections