The Promise and Limitations of Student Belonging as a Predictor of Retention

Efforts to improve student retention are regularly explored within higher education literature and practice due to their status as a noble aim shared by governments, universities, and students themselves. To this end, students’ sense of belonging has become an increasingly popular topic of study due...

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Main Authors: David Gilani, Daniel McArthur, Liz Thomas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2024-11-01
Series:Trends in Higher Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2813-4346/3/4/58
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author David Gilani
Daniel McArthur
Liz Thomas
author_facet David Gilani
Daniel McArthur
Liz Thomas
author_sort David Gilani
collection DOAJ
description Efforts to improve student retention are regularly explored within higher education literature and practice due to their status as a noble aim shared by governments, universities, and students themselves. To this end, students’ sense of belonging has become an increasingly popular topic of study due to its comprehensive links to student success. However, while student retention is understood as a binary, externally defined metric, student belonging is subjective, messy, and dynamic. This study utilises a longitudinal design to explore the changing relationship between student belonging, intention to persist, and eventual continuation with 101 first-year undergraduate students at two English universities. Regression analyses were utilised to build on previous research showing the near-perfect correlation between belonging and students’ intention to persist. Sense of belonging was also a strong predictor of eventual continuation status for all time-point measures of belonging except at the start of the first academic year. These findings provide further evidence for the promise of student belonging as a tool for practitioners to pre-empt risks of withdrawal. However, the findings also suggest that early measurements of a sense of belonging could be less reliable.
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spelling doaj-art-6f63b72351334ee69752c042c4d98da32025-08-20T02:53:38ZengMDPI AGTrends in Higher Education2813-43462024-11-0134993101610.3390/higheredu3040058The Promise and Limitations of Student Belonging as a Predictor of RetentionDavid Gilani0Daniel McArthur1Liz Thomas2Department of Education, University of York, York YO10 5DD, UKDepartment of Education, University of York, York YO10 5DD, UKDepartment of Education, University of York, York YO10 5DD, UKEfforts to improve student retention are regularly explored within higher education literature and practice due to their status as a noble aim shared by governments, universities, and students themselves. To this end, students’ sense of belonging has become an increasingly popular topic of study due to its comprehensive links to student success. However, while student retention is understood as a binary, externally defined metric, student belonging is subjective, messy, and dynamic. This study utilises a longitudinal design to explore the changing relationship between student belonging, intention to persist, and eventual continuation with 101 first-year undergraduate students at two English universities. Regression analyses were utilised to build on previous research showing the near-perfect correlation between belonging and students’ intention to persist. Sense of belonging was also a strong predictor of eventual continuation status for all time-point measures of belonging except at the start of the first academic year. These findings provide further evidence for the promise of student belonging as a tool for practitioners to pre-empt risks of withdrawal. However, the findings also suggest that early measurements of a sense of belonging could be less reliable.https://www.mdpi.com/2813-4346/3/4/58student belongingstudent retentionstudent successcontinuationintention to persistpersistence
spellingShingle David Gilani
Daniel McArthur
Liz Thomas
The Promise and Limitations of Student Belonging as a Predictor of Retention
Trends in Higher Education
student belonging
student retention
student success
continuation
intention to persist
persistence
title The Promise and Limitations of Student Belonging as a Predictor of Retention
title_full The Promise and Limitations of Student Belonging as a Predictor of Retention
title_fullStr The Promise and Limitations of Student Belonging as a Predictor of Retention
title_full_unstemmed The Promise and Limitations of Student Belonging as a Predictor of Retention
title_short The Promise and Limitations of Student Belonging as a Predictor of Retention
title_sort promise and limitations of student belonging as a predictor of retention
topic student belonging
student retention
student success
continuation
intention to persist
persistence
url https://www.mdpi.com/2813-4346/3/4/58
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