1 / 13

Parent, Peer, and Faculty Influence on Student Co-Curricular Involvement

Parent, Peer, and Faculty Influence on Student Co-Curricular Involvement. Heather Ammons, M.Ed Michelle Maher, Ph.D. First Year Experience Coordinator Associate Professor, Darton College Higher Education Admin. University of South Carolina. Introduction.

ward
Download Presentation

Parent, Peer, and Faculty Influence on Student Co-Curricular Involvement

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Parent, Peer, and Faculty Influence on Student Co-Curricular Involvement Heather Ammons, M.Ed Michelle Maher, Ph.D. First Year Experience Coordinator Associate Professor, Darton College Higher Education Admin. University of South Carolina

  2. Introduction • Involvement in co-curricular activities is an integral part of the college experience (Kuh, 1995) • Students develop a range of valuable skills • Little is know about how parents, peers, and faculty influence students’ decision to participate

  3. Research Question • What messages do students receive from parents, peers, and faculty about the value of co-curricular participation?

  4. Literature • Parents • Attachment to caregivers influences several college outcomes (Rice, 1995) • Peers • “Students spend the greatest amount of time in college with other students: therefore, they are the primary agents of socialization for one another in a variety of domains (Moran & Gonyea, 2003, pg. 13) • Faculty • Interactions with faculty influence students’ satisfaction with and persistence in college (Pascarella, 1980)

  5. Method • Site • Large southeastern university with over 300 co-curricular organizations in operation • Sample • Twelve full-time undergraduate science majors • Data Collection and Analysis • In-depth interview designed to gather data on students’ perceptions of their co-curricular involvement and messages about this involvement students felt they had received from parents, peers, and professors

  6. Results - Parents • Exerted a significant and positive influence on involvement • Some were involved in activities and served as an example and role model • Also had the potential to be associated with negative influences on students involvement

  7. Results- Peers • Provided information on how to become involved in activities, as well as what activities to pursue • Student reported that they were often asked to join activities by their friends

  8. Results – University Personnel • All mentioned talking to their professors, both in and outside their major, about academic issues • If involvement in extracurricular activities was ever mentioned, it was mostly by e-mail or delivered to the class as a whole • Few students express disappointment at how the information was often not mentioned • Several professors were support of the extracurricular endeavors of the students

  9. Framework • Co-curricular Involvement Framework. Shows further relationships between motivation, influence and perceived value, as well as an added factor of information.

  10. Recommendations • Peers • Exchange information and support each others decisions • Parents • Support your students’ decision and serve as an example • Professors • Take responsibility for your strong influence and encourage students to participate • Institutions • Continue to provide opportunities for students outside of the classroom • Create an intuitional environment that fosters a student academic and extracurricular pursuits

  11. Conclussion • Peers, parents, and faculty significantly influence a students decision to become involved in extracurricular activities. • Parents and professors serves as bearers of knowledge and can relay the benefits of involvement by supporting a students desire to become involved • Peers serve as information bearers and mainly provide how to get involved and what to get involved with

  12. Reference Moran, E.T. & Gonyea, T. (2003), The Influence of Academically-Focused Peer Interaction on College Students’ Development. (ERIC Document Reproduction Service NO. ED 478 773) Pascarella, E.T. (1980). Student-Faculty Informal Contact and College Outcomes. Review of Education Research, (50)4, 545-595. Rice, K.G. & others. (1995). Cross-Sectional and Longitudinal Examination of Attachment, Separation-Individuation, and College Adjustment. Journal of Counseling and Development, 73(4). (ERIC Document EJ511361)

  13. Contact Information • Heather Ammons First Year Experience Coordinator Darton College Albany, Georgia 229-317-6864 Heather.ammons@darton.edu

More Related