New Study Suggests That in the Long Run, College Choice MattersWASHINGTON, D.C. - Does the type of school an undergraduate attends really make a difference? A new survey suggests that it does. A comparative alumni survey, conducted by the independent research firm of Hardwick Day and commissioned by the Annapolis Group, has found that the undergraduate experience students encounter at small, residential liberal arts colleges is more effective in producing meaningful and lasting benefits than the education experienced at large, public universities and other institutions of higher education. The study, titled What Matters in College After College, indicates that a residential, liberal arts education not only leads to a number of immediate positive outcomes, but that these outcomes are present in and important to liberal arts college alumni long after their college experience has ended. Among the findings:
The Hardwick Day study was based on interviews with 1,571 alumni from five types of schools: Annapolis Group liberal arts colleges, private universities, the top 50 public universities (as ranked by U.S. News & World Report), national flagship public universities and regional public universities. Unlike most previous studies that have surveyed students shortly after their graduation, The Hardwick Day study surveyed alumni from the Classes of 1970 through 1995, and tried to assess lasting effects on career preparation, broad skill development, personal and professional values and attitudes, community involvement, and overall satisfaction with undergraduate education. The Hardwick Day study drew on Alexander Astin's (UCLA) What Matters in College: Four Critical Years Revisited, the definitive study of how students change and develop in college and how colleges can enhance that development, and the work of education researchers such as Ernest T. Pascarella and Patrick T. Terenzini on educational effectiveness. The Hardwick Day survey sought to identify the extent to which the attributes associated with educational effectiveness are present at various types of colleges and universities, as reported by their alumni, and the degree to which these attributes are valued by the alumni themselves. |
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