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One major adjustment freshmen face is getting lower grades than
they did in high school. Over half of new freshmen reported having
an "A" average in their last year of high school but
only 17% made that claim about their college GPA in the spring
term of their freshman year.
Berea College freshmen also report a substantial reduction in
performing volunteer work. While nearly 90% worked as volunteers
in high school, only 63% claimed doing so in their first college
year.

These results are based on the entering class of 2004 and come
from two national surveys that we use at Berea College. The first
is given to entering new freshmen in the fall and a follow-up is
given to those same students in the spring of their first year.
Both surveys were created by the Higher Education Research Institute
(HERI) and are designed to monitor national trends in students’ backgrounds,
beliefs, experiences and activities related to their social, political,
and academic lives. Trend data for the survey go back to the 1960s.
Comparing students’ experiences from high school to college,
Berea’s new freshmen, like their peers at similar colleges:
- are less likely to attend a religious service
since entering college
- are less likely to report maintaining
a healthy diet and exercising
- rate themselves as more
cooperative, creative, and emotionally healthy overall
- rate themselves as having a greater self-understanding
after a few months of college
- are more likely to consider
it essential to keep up with political affairs.
Unlike their peers at similar institutions, Berea’s
freshmen report drinking less beer, wine, and liquor in
high school (34% versus 55%) and Berea students reduce
their overall drinking in their first year of college.
And, in contrast to most other college freshmen across
the country, Berea freshmen are more likely to report socializing
with someone of another racial/ethnic group than they did
in high school.
At Berea, freshman men and women differ in some major
ways. At Berea, men’s intellectual self-confidence
decreases dramatically (-25%) in the first year whereas
women's perceptions increase substantially (+15%). In contrast,
students at other nonsectarian (not church affiliated)
four-year colleges show that men's ratings drop only slightly
while women's increase but only by a small margin.
However, men's ratings of their own cooperativeness and
leadership ability both increase greatly (+22%) while women's
ratings increase only slightly. In contrast, the ratings
from men and women at comparison institutions change very
little.

At Berea, men's ratings of their own self-understanding
do not change at all while women's ratings increase by
over 20%. The national data show only modest changes for
both men and women. And, Berea men's ratings of how important
it is to develop a meaningful philosophy of life dramatically
increases in their first college year (by 23%).

Looking back over 40 years, recent college freshmen (including
those at Berea) are more likely than ever to report that
their academic, leadership, and writing skills are higher
compared to their peers. Other trends show that, for example,
the percentage of students who rate themselves above average
in physical fitness has been dropping since about 1986
(it is now at less than 40%). You may view Berea's trends
over the decades compared to similar institutions at:
To view a complete set of findings showing the changes
made by Berea students from high school to their first
year in college, please click here:
This study summary is provided by the Office of
Institutional Research and Assessment
Berea College CPO 2177, Phone: (859) 985-3790.
Provost Committee Members
Joe
Bagnoli, Associate Provost for Enrollment Management
Janice
Blythe, Associate Provost for Advising and Academic
Success
Stephanie
Browner, Dean of the Faculty
Jackie
Burnside, Associate Dean of the Faculty
Delphia
Canterbury, Staff Support
Jamie
Ealy, Director of Admissions
Carolyn
Newton, Provost
David
Tipton, Dean of Labor
Judith Weckman, Director of Institutional Research and
Assessment
Gail
Wolford, Vice President for Labor and Student Life
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