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ABSTRACTS,
SPRING 2000 (Volume 27, no. 4)
Institutional
Expenditure Patterns and the Facilitation of Mission
Thompson and
Riggs The authors examine
the relationship between institutional spending
patterns and performance funding standards at the 14
public community colleges in Tennessee, the first
state to implement performance funding standards for
its community colleges. Performance standard scores
and data on expenditures by category were analyzed to
determine the percent of revenue spent by function in
relationship to individual and aggregated performance
standard scores for the colleges. The analyses
revealed a relationship between expenditure categories
and performance standard scores, with higher scoring
colleges spending a greater portion of funds on
academic support and instruction than lower scoring
colleges.
Multiple
Realities: Characteristics of Loan Defaulters at a
Two-Year Public Institution
Christman
Data from the
National Student Loan Data System and a college's
student data base for cohort years 1993, 1994, and
1995 yielded descriptive statistics on 260 borrowers
who defaulted on student loans at one public two-year
college. After describing characteristics associated
with defaulters, the author provides supporting
information from a qualitative survey that elicited
perceptions about loan defaulters from 12 respondents
representing students, faculty, and staff at the
college. Findings indicate that student background
characteristics play as great a role in loan default
behavior as institutional influences, and the author
provides suggestions for future research and policy
efforts.
Faculty Computer Use
and Training: Identifying Distinct Needs for Different
Populations Dusick and Yildirim
A quantitative
survey directed at all faculty at a California urban
community college yielded data from 117 faculty about
computer use, competency, and attitudes toward using
computers. Correlation analysis, multiple regression,
and Ordinary Least Squares regression were used to
delineate the relationships between computer use and
other variables and to develop a path analysis model
depicting the relationship among attitude, courses
taken, having a home computer, competency, and
computer use. The researchers present their model
along with data obtained from an open-ended
qualitative survey administered to elucidate further
the relationships among these variables. Based on
their quantitative and qualitative findings, the
authors make suggestions for future research to assist
in faculty development efforts.
- Editors' Choice:
Technology Refresh--A Multi-College
Approach
- Spiwak (pp.
48-53)
- The author describes
a cooperative purchasing effort initiated by Florida
community colleges and extended to all the state's
postsecondary institutions that has resulted in some
$33 million in savings on computer technology
purchases for participating institutions. This report
describes how the resulting Technology Refresh Program
has assured the continual upgrading and maintenance of
computers purchased by the institutions and provided
faculty, staff, and students with the opportunity to
join the cooperative program for personal computer
purchases.
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ERIC Review: Service Learning in the Community College
- Kozeracki (pp.
54-70)
After presenting a comprehensive definition of service learning
in postsecondary education, the author reviews the literature
on service learning at community colleges. In addition to discussing
national initiatives to promote service learning experiences for
students, this review provides examples of service learning programs
and summarizes best practices for starting and managing such programs
based on case studies in the literature. The results of recent
program evaluation efforts are discussed, and the author defines
current research needs to determine how service learning affects
students.
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