Stanford study shows college student coaching improves retention and graduation rates
MARCH 10, 2011
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: Amy Yuen, Communications Manager, Stanford University School of Education, (650) 724-9440, amy.yuen@stanford.edu
COMMENT: Eric Bettinger, Associate Professor of Education, Stanford University School of Education, (650) 736-7727, ebetting@stanford.edu
STANFORD
–Student coaching significantly increases the likelihood that college
students will stay in school and graduate, according to a new study released today by researchers at Stanford University School of Education.
The study, conducted by Stanford University Associate Professor Eric Bettinger and doctoral student Rachel Baker,
reviewed the academic records of more than 13,500 students from eight
colleges and universities across the 2003-4 and 2007-8 academic years.
The researchers compared randomly selected, demographically balanced
groups of coached vs. non-coached students, and found a 10 -to
15-percent increase in retention and graduation rates among those in the
coached group. Bettinger and Baker measured student outcomes using data
provided by InsideTrack, a national student coaching company.
“The
results are clear: coaching had a clear impact on retention and
completion rates,” Bettinger said. “And not only does coaching improve
the likelihood students will remain in college, but expenditures on
coaching are much smaller than the costs of other methods to encourage
persistence in college.”
Bettinger and Baker announced their findings Thursday through the National Bureau of Economic Research’s website.
Following a randomization process, 8,000 of the students received
one-on-one coaching and 5,500 did not. The universities participating in
the study provided data on student persistence after six, 12, 18 and 24
months. Degree completion data was also provided for a subsample of
students in the earlier sample year.
Other research results included:
- Increased retention rates in the coached groups across all of the time frames following the students’ enrollment:
o After six months, the coached student group led the non-coached group in retention by about 10 percent. After 12 months, the coached group led by nearly 12 percent. The coached group also led at 18 months and 24 months, by 15 and 14 percent, respectively. The results were consistent when the researchers controlled for age, gender, SAT or ACT scores, high-school GPA, and scholarships and grants.
- Graduation rates were 13 percent higher for coached students in the subsample where completion rate information was available.
“The
research about the effects of coaching has implications for
institutions of higher learning and for the policymakers at the state
and national level who are grappling with improving retention and
graduation rates," Bettinger said.
Bettinger, who has studied
the effects of financial aid on college retention, also found that
student coaching appears to be cost effective. For instance, Bettinger
said, a $1,000 increase in financial aid typically increases persistence
by three percentage points, while a two-semester investment in
one-on-one coaching costs about the same and increases persistence by
five percentage points.
“Coaching not only works, but it appears
to be one of the more cost effective ways to produce better retention
and graduation rates,” Bettinger said.
For more information
about the research results, please see “The Effects of Student Coaching:
An Evaluation of a Randomized Experiment in Student Advising,” National
Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper at http://ed.stanford.edu/sites/default/files/bettinger_baker_030711.pdf. The paper is also available to NBER subscribers at http://www.nber.org/papers/w16881.
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