An Analysis of Naval Officer Student Academic Performance in the Operations Analysis Curriculum in Relationship to Academic Profile Codes and other Factors.

Abstract

The ability to forecast the academic performance of Naval Officer students in the Operations Analysis curriculum is an issue of importance to the Navy. In the interest of cost effectiveness and achieving the required numbers of operations analysis graduates, this thesis studies the present student selection factors for the OA curriculum and suggests several alternative factors to improve the selection decision. An analysis of variance approach was taken to explore the relationship of the student's academic profile code and several other variables to determine their importance in explaining the OA student's academic performance. A study of 159 OA Navy OA students was completed. The analysis showed the student's overall total college grade point average, the time from completion of college to commencement of work in the OA curriculum (in fact performance does not decrease over time), the student's designator and his college degree to be the most important factors on explaining the variability of student performance.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Sep 01, 1985
Accession Number
ADA161178

Entities

People

  • N. W. Blatt

Organizations

  • Naval Postgraduate School

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Human Systems

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Analysis Of Variance
  • Covariance
  • Data Science
  • Education
  • Humanities
  • Information Science
  • Military Personnel
  • Numerical Analysis
  • Operations Research
  • Predictive Modeling
  • Regression Analysis
  • Social Sciences
  • Statistical Algorithms
  • Statistics
  • Students
  • Surveys
  • United States

Fields of Study

  • Education

Readers

  • Life Cycle Cost Analysis
  • Naval Personnel Management
  • Research Science/Academic Research