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Academic predictors of cooperative education participation

conference contribution
posted on 2017-12-06, 00:00 authored by N Ramirez, J Main, T Fletcher, Matthew Ohland
Cooperative education (co-op) programs in engineering provide students with relevant professional experience before they finish their undergraduate degree. Most programs and employers have academic eligibility requirements that make it difficult to infer whether successful employment outcomes are due to the selection of higher performing students or the causal effect of co-op participation. The goal of this study is to determine factors that are associated with participation in engineering cooperative education programs, controlling for eligibility. Longitudinal and multivariate data from six different institutions, each with large engineering programs where co-op participation is not mandatory, were studied with stepwise logistic regression. Results show that cumulative GPA at the end of the second semester is the strongest predictor of co-op participation. While institutional differences, year of matriculation, ethnicity, major discipline, and high school variables are also significant, gender is not related to co-op participation. The results from this paper will provide useful information for colleges, co-op administrators, and employers about who participates in co-op programs.

History

Start Page

1

End Page

6

Number of Pages

6

Start Date

2014-01-01

ISSN

0190-5848

ISBN-13

9781479939213

Location

Madrid, Spain

Publisher

IEEE

Place of Publication

USA

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Name of Conference

Frontiers in Education Conference

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