Colleges Adopt Programs to Help Freshmen Adapt

As you search for a good fit, look for programs that aim to engage and connect students.

NOVEMBER 25, 2013: Dorm room in the Global Neighborhood, on which construction began in 2013, and the first students moved in in fall 2013. (photo by Kim Walker) ELON

Schools are introducing programs – like this living-learning arts floor at Elon University – aimed at helping students thrive.

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​Consider this shocking stat as you shop for a college: Fully one-third of freshmen don’t return for sophomore year. And only 61 percent of undergraduates get a degree within six years.

So your guidance counselor isn't kidding when she says your job is to find a college that’s a great fit for you. Not your parents, not your friends – you. But you also might want to check out what schools of interest are doing to make themselves "sticky."

The goal "is to get students connected," says Martha McCaughey, a sociology professor and faculty coordinator of the required first-year seminar at Appalachian State University in North Carolina. The semesterlong discussion-based class pairs small groups of freshmen with faculty members teaching a topic they are passionate about.

The reasons students drop out or transfer run the gamut, of course – from family issues and money problems to loneliness and academic struggles. Some can’t be overcome. But research has shown that creating bonds "both academically and socially" is key to success in college, says Alexander McCormick, director of the annual National Survey of Student Engagement and an associate professor at Indiana University—Bloomington.

Schools are adding "high-impact practices" shown to get students pumped up about their studies and help them connect with peers and professors, from service-learning classes that incorporate volunteer work to internships to undergraduate research. These practices, along with a move to make advising "intrusive" (read: unavoidable), are worth looking for in your college search.

[Get tips and advice on finding the right college or university for you.]

Last year's NSSE survey​ of nearly 335,000 freshmen and seniors at 568 schools revealed that freshmen who participated in at least one high-impact practice were more likely to say they’d choose the same school again.

Retention and graduation rates certainly merit comparison. If schools on your short list have a low freshman retention or graduation rate, it’s smart to ask the admissions office why.

And ask for details about programs aimed at bringing the rates up. Many schools can say they’ve added these practices, but "the quality varies a lot," cautions Debra Humphreys, vice president for policy and public engagement at the Association of American Colleges and Universities.

The homesickness and rocky adjustment to college-level work many freshmen face can be eased by "first-year experiences" like the seminars at ASU and others​ that regularly mix small groups of students and faculty to engage in critical inquiry, writing and collaborative learning.

Some institutions, including Ohio State University, Syracuse University in New York, Elon University in North Carolina and Vanderbilt University in Tennessee, emphasize "learning communities" for freshmen (older students, too), in which groups of students who share an interest take two or more linked classes together and get to know one another and their professors well.

Many of these schools stretch the concept into "living-learning communities," so that classmates who study together live together, too. The University of Maryland offers 25 to 30 such residential options, for example, focused around themes ranging from social change to women in engineering; about half of the 4,000 freshmen join one.

[See which colleges and universities are known for their learning communities.​]

Building community service into the course work is another method that a whole range of schools, including Brown University in Rhode Island, the University of Michigan and James Madison University in Virginia, are using to engage students. A sociology class might operate a food pantry, for example; an architecture class might design a green community center.

By supplementing material covered in class with a team effort to actually solve problems in the community, service-learning courses help make "what’s happening in the textbooks come alive," says Richard Guarasci, president of Wagner College in New York City, a liberal arts school considered a leader in the practice.

Academic frustration can certainly derail the best-laid plans, so many schools are greatly strengthening their advisory systems and revamping remedial education. It’s become common for faculty members teaching first-year seminars to also take on advisory duties for students in the class, for example.