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Featured researches published by Libby V. Morris.


American Journal of Distance Education | 2005

Predicting Retention in Online General Education Courses

Libby V. Morris; Sz-Shyan Wu; Catherine Finnegan

A classification rule was developed to predict undergraduate students& withdrawal from or completion of fully online general education courses. A multivariate technique, predictive discriminant analysis (PDA), was used. High school grade point average and SAT mathematics score were shown to be related to retention in the online university courses. Locus of control and financial aid were able to identify dropout and completion with 74.5% accuracy.


Journal of College Student Retention: Research, Theory and Practice | 2008

Best Practices in Predicting and Encouraging Student Persistence and Achievement Online

Libby V. Morris; Catherine Finnegan

Four research studies of students and faculty engaged in fully online undergraduate courses are analyzed to generate best practices for teaching and learning online. These studies investigated the relationship of student background variables and online behaviors to student persistence and achievement in the online environment. Over 500 students enrolled in lower division, undergraduate courses offered online were included in the analyses. The courses were designed by faculty and instructional design experts and met standards of quality course design established by the offering colleges and universities. By combining the results of the study, guidelines for advising students and faculty for success in the online environment emerged.


Journal of College Student Retention: Research, Theory and Practice | 2008

Differences by Course Discipline on Student Behavior, Persistence, and Achievement in Online Courses of Undergraduate General Education

Catherine Finnegan; Libby V. Morris; Kangjoo Lee

This research empirically examined student behavior in online courses and its relationship to persistence and achievement across fields. Eight variables descriptive of student behaviors online were measured for 1) frequency and 2) duration of participation. Twenty-two courses were grouped into three broad fields: English and Communication; Social Sciences; and Math, Science, and Technology. The descriptive data revealed significant differences in student online participation, persistence, and achievement across the fields. Multiple regression analyses were used to evaluate how well student participation measures predicted achievement. Depending on the field, different portions of the variability in achievement were accounted for by student participation measures.


Journal of Agricultural and Applied Economics | 2000

AMERICA'S FORGOTTEN PEOPLE AND PLACES: ENDING THE LEGACY OF POVERTY IN THE RURAL SOUTH

Joyce E. Allen-Smith; Ronald C. Wimberley; Libby V. Morris

This study focuses on the longstanding impoverishment of the rural South and three of its subregions-Appalachia, the Mississippi Delta, and the Black Belt. The poor quality of life in rural Appalachia and along the Mississippi Delta has been publically acknowledged by programs and commissions for improving conditions. However, the more comprehensive Black Belt subregion that links parts of Southern Appalachia and the Southern Delta has not received such regional policy attention. While the South as a whole is more rural and impoverished than other U.S. regions, this is largely due to the poor conditions in the Black Belt. In addition to region and rurality, a third feature of the pattern is race. It is in the Black Belt that the Souths poor socioeconomic conditions are most concentrated. Policy and program attention are needed for regional solutions that take rurality and race into account along with demographic and other subregional characteristics.


Community Development | 1996

African-American Community Development in Theory and Practice: A Georgia Case Study.

Libby V. Morris; Gina L. Gilbreath

This case study examines an ongoing community development project in a majority African-American county in Georgia. Using interviews, publications, and survey data, the characteristics of the local development effort are identified and compared with the essential elements in the black organizational autonomy (BOA) model of community development. Other important components in the ongoing project are introduced to add efficacy to Hortons BOA model of community development.


Internet and Higher Education | 2005

Tracking Student Behavior, Persistence, and Achievement in Online Courses.

Libby V. Morris; Catherine Finnegan; Sz-Shyan Wu


Archive | 2005

ROLES OF FACULTY IN TEACHING ASYNCHRONOUS UNDERGRADUATE COURSES

Libby V. Morris; Haixia Xu; Catherine Finnegan


Innovative Higher Education | 2007

Collaborative Course Development for Online Courses

Haixia Xu; Libby V. Morris


Innovative Higher Education | 2013

MOOCs, Emerging Technologies, and Quality

Libby V. Morris


Innovative Higher Education | 2008

Higher Education and Sustainability

Libby V. Morris

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Catherine Finnegan

University System of Georgia

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Haixia Xu

University of Georgia

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Ronald C. Wimberley

North Carolina State University

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Tom McKlin

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Finnegan Catherine

University System of Georgia

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Patricia Oliver

Georgia Institute of Technology

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