The following code should work. I've made a few assumptions as follows: there are no overlaps of date ranges, there are no NULL values in any of the fields, and the start date for a given row is always less than the end date. If your data doesn't fit these criteria, you'll need to adjust this method, but it should point you in the right direction.
You can use subqueries instead of the views, but that can be cumbersome so I used the views to make the code clearer.
CREATE VIEW dbo.StudentStartDates
AS
SELECT
S.StudentID,
S.StartDate,
S.Field1,
S.Field2
FROM
dbo.Students S
LEFT OUTER JOIN dbo.Students PREV ON
PREV.StudentID = S.StudentID AND
PREV.Field1 = S.Field1 AND
PREV.Field2 = S.Field2 AND
PREV.EndDate = DATEADD(dy, -1, S.StartDate)
WHERE PREV.StudentID IS NULL
GO
CREATE VIEW dbo.StudentEndDates
AS
SELECT
S.StudentID,
S.EndDate,
S.Field1,
S.Field2
FROM
dbo.Students S
LEFT OUTER JOIN dbo.Students NEXT ON
NEXT.StudentID = S.StudentID AND
NEXT.Field1 = S.Field1 AND
NEXT.Field2 = S.Field2 AND
NEXT.EndDate = DATEADD(dy, 1, S.EndDate)
WHERE NEXT.StudentID IS NULL
GO
SELECT
SD.StudentID,
SD.StartDate,
ED.EndDate,
SD.Field1,
SD.Field2
FROM
dbo.StudentStartDates SD
INNER JOIN dbo.StudentEndDates ED ON
ED.StudentID = SD.StudentID AND
ED.Field1 = SD.Field1 AND
ED.Field2 = SD.Field2 AND
ED.EndDate > SD.StartDate AND
NOT EXISTS (SELECT * FROM dbo.StudentEndDates ED2 WHERE ED2.StudentID = SD.StudentID AND ED2.Field1 = SD.Field1 AND ED2.Field2 = SD.Field2 AND ED2.EndDate < ED.EndDate AND ED2.EndDate > SD.StartDate)
GO