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North Carolina State University
2010 First-Year Student Survey:
Introduction, Methods, and Student Demographic Profile


Introduction

This series of reports presents findings from the 2010 First-Year Student Survey at NC State. Each year since 1972, students entering in the Fall semester have been asked to participate in the survey. The survey is conducted during the summer months prior to the start of the semester. Students entering into all 11 undergraduate academic units, including the Agricultural Institute and the First Year College, are included.

This introductory report describes the survey's methodology and 2010 first-year class. It compares gender, race/ethnicity1, academic unit, and academic preparation statistics of survey respondents with the Fall 2010 first-year student population. Reports with gender and racial/ethnic comparisons, as well as comparisons between colleges and departments within colleges, are available in the Table of Contents. In each report, summary statistics are presented for each survey topic, including student background characteristics, the application process, educational intent and interests, and goals for undergraduate education.

Survey Methods

Respondents

The 2010 First-Year Student Survey was administered online between July 6, 2010 and September 6, 2010. During the week following their attendance at New Student Orientation during the summer prior to their first semester, students were sent e-mail invitations to participate in the survey. Those who did not attend summer orientation were also invited to participate. A total of 2,882 surveys were completed by enrolled and attending first-year students. This figure represents 61.3 percent of the 4,703 first-year students who were still enrolled in classes 10 days into the Fall 2010 semester.

Analyses

The survey data were analyzed using standard statistical methods. In analyses not presented in these reports, responses were tested to determine whether there were significant differences between women and men, between respondents of different racial/ethnic groups, and between respondents of different colleges2.

Because the response rate is high (61.3%) and the number of incoming students is large (4,703), the margin of sampling error for these results is very low -- less than one percent (±0.7) at a 95 percent confidence interval. That is, if 35.9 percent of the respondents say they were "very certain" of their college major, we can be 95 percent sure that the true figure would be between 35.5 percent (35.9 - 0.7) and 36.6 percent (35.9 + 0.7) if all first-year students had responded to the survey3. The margin of sampling error increases as the sample size decreases, so statements for various subgroups, such as the separate figures reported for whites and African Americans, are less precise than statements based on the total sample.

These reports attempt to provide a level of detail that makes the data more accessible and interpretable to the novice data user. A primary purpose is to highlight patterns found in responses to related question items or between comparison groups. Such consistencies among items or between groups are usually more important for understanding the data than are the sizes of the differences between individual pairs of ratings or ranks or, to some extent, whether the differences are statistically significant. While some individual small differences might be statistically significant, they may not be substantively meaningful. On the other hand, when even relatively small differences yield consistent patterns within a similar series of questions, the results are potentially more telling.

Demographics of the First-Year Class and Survey Respondents

Gender and Race/Ethnicity (Table 1)

Women were slightly overrepresented among survey respondents, making up 51 percent of survey respondents, but only 45 percent of the first-year population (Table 1). There are no significant racial/ethnic differences between the first-year students enrolled at NC State and those who responded to the survey.

Table 1: Demographics of First-Year Population and Survey Respondents
Race/Ethnicity
N
%
First-Year Population Survey Respondents Response Rate
Men Women Total Men Women Total Men Women Total
Asian American 121
2.6%
120
2.6%
241
5.1%
67
2.3%
78
2.7%
145
5.0%
55.4% 65.0% 60.2%
Black / African American 212
4.5%
183
3.9%
395
8.4%
113
3.9%
126
4.4%
239
8.3%
53.3% 68.9% 60.5%
Hispanic 92
2.0%
84
1.8%
176
3.7%
55
1.9%
56
1.9%
111
3.9%
59.8% 66.7% 63.1%
White 2,037
43.3%
1,563
33.2%
3,600
76.5%
1,114
38.7%
1,106
38.4%
2,220
77.0%
54.7% 70.8% 61.7%
Other / Unknown 135
2.9%
156
3.3%
291
6.2%
69
2.4%
98
3.4%
167
5.8%
51.1% 62.8% 57.4%
Total 2,597
55.2%
2,106
44.8%
4,703
100.0%
1,418
49.2%
1,464
50.8%
2,882
100.0%
54.6% 69.5% 61.3%
Note: Survey respondents are included in figures for the First-Year class.

Academic Units (Table 2)

Table 2 shows enrollment of first-year students and survey respondents by academic unit. The largest percentage of first-year students enrolled in the College of Engineering (27.3%), followed by the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences (17.1%) and First-Year College (16.3%). Enrollment figures were lowest for the College of Design (2.5%). The College of Agriculture and Life Sciences is slightly overrepresented among survey respondents, while the College of Engineering is slightly underrepresented.

Respondents from the Agricultural Institute have been excluded from the analyses presented in this series of reports so that responses reflect the views and circumstances of students pursing a four-year baccalaureate degree.

Table 2: Classification by Academic Unit
Academic Unit First-Year Population Survey Respondents Response
Rate
Margin of
Sampling Error
N % N %
Agriculture and Life Sciences 803 17.1% 569 19.7% 70.9% ±1.2
Design 119 2.5% 63 2.2% 52.9% ±5.8
Education 151 3.2% 100 3.5% 66.2% ±3.3
Engineering 1,283 27.3% 743 25.8% 57.9% ±1.5
Natural Resources 198 4.2% 113 3.9% 57.1% ±4.0
Humanities and Social Sciences 467 9.9% 273 9.5% 58.5% ±2.5
Physical and Mathematical Sciences 204 4.3% 133 4.6% 65.2% ±3.0
Textiles 204 4.3% 118 4.1% 57.8% ±3.8
Management 361 7.7% 239 8.3% 66.2% ±2.1
First-Year College 767 16.3% 486 16.9% 63.4% ±1.6
Subtotal 4,557 96.9% 2,837 98.4% 62.3% ±0.7
Agricultural Institute 146 3.1% 45 1.6% 30.8% ±10.1
Total 4,703 100.0% 2,882 100.0% 61.3% ±0.7

Academic Preparation (Table 3)

Table 3 presents academic preparation statistics for the 2010 first-year class and survey respondents. Although there were no significant differences in the SAT scores of survey respondents, as compared to the first-year population, high school grade point average was slightly higher among survey respondents than among the first-year students as a whole.

Table 3: Academic Preparation of First-Year Class and Survey Respondents
Academic Preparation Measure First-Year
Population
Survey
Respondents
SAT Verbal 573.9 574.9
SAT Math 609.8 608.9
SAT Written 558.1 559.6
SAT Total 1741.8 1743.4
High School GPA 3.55 3.59


Endnotes:

1. The term "racial/ethnic" is used throughout these reports to recognize the potentially blurred distinction between the individual terms. In application materials students were requested to identify themselves using any number of the following categories: Hispanic or Latino, American Indian or Alaska Native, Asian, Black or African American, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander, and White. For analysis purposes, these categories were collapsed into "Asian American," "Black/African American," "Hispanic," "White," and "Other/Unknown." (back)
2. Questions requiring categorical responses were analyzed with chi-square tests, and questions with numerically coded responses were analyzed with either T-tests or one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) with Duncan's multiple comparison procedure. Complete results are available from UPA on request. (back)
3. A 95 percent confidence interval denotes the range of values that contains the true population value in 95 of 100 possible random samples of the first-year student population. The margin of error given in the text is conservative since it was calculated assuming a 50/50 response distribution for all questions. Margins of error for individual survey items are likely to be even smaller because response distributions are rarely symmetrical. (back)


For more information on the 2010 First-Year Student Survey contact:
Dr. Nancy Whelchel, Associate Director for Survey Research
Office of Institutional Planning and Research
Box 7002
NCSU
Phone: (919) 515-4184
Email: Nancy_Whelchel@ncsu.edu

Posted: January 2011

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