Title
Challenges and Approaches for Data Collection to Understand Student Retention: (Abstract Only).
Abstract
For many years, computing faculty have devoted substantial time and energy to the retention of diverse populations. But how are we doing really? The ACM Retention Committee has identified at least 5 populations of interest in tracking student retention: * Students who start college expecting to major in computing. * Students who enter college with some interest in computing, but also with other interests. * Students who enter college with interests outside computing, but who take computing early as part of a broad education. * Students who enter college with little or no interest in computing, but need a computing course to satisfy a general education requirement or a prerequisite in another discipline. * Students who transfer into a four-year university from a two-year college, partway into a computer science program. In practice, each group has different characteristics, and retention rates may vary dramatically. On some campuses, gathering data for the first group may be manageable--particularly if students declare majors as they enter college. Data collection and tracking for others is difficult, since these populations may not be known in early years. This BoF will identify approaches for tracking students and for exploring retention rates. Further, this BoF will encourage sharing and brainstorming for further mechanisms to help data collection. As we better identify retention rates among various populations, the ACM Retention Committee hopes we can better understand obstacles and opportunities related to retention. Session Agenda: Context/Introduction, Data most relevant locally, What data are currently tracked, Thoughts about a common data gathering instrument
Year
DOI
Venue
2018
10.1145/3159450.3162169
SIGCSE '18: The 49th ACM Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education Baltimore Maryland USA February, 2018
Keywords
Field
DocType
Student retention,data collection
Medical education,Data collection,Brainstorming,Computer science,Knowledge management,General education
Conference
ISBN
Citations 
PageRank 
978-1-4503-5103-4
1
0.63
References 
Authors
0
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Henry M. Walker117964.67
Mehran Sahami24138556.74
Christine Alvarado34010.94