Literaturnachweis - Detailanzeige
Autor/inn/en | Lucas, John A.; Meltesen, Cal |
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Institution | William Rainey Harper Coll., Palatine, IL. Office of Planning and Research. |
Titel | Study of Students Who Withdrew from Courses, Summer 1990-Spring 1992. Volume XXII, No. 6. |
Quelle | (1993), (27 Seiten)
PDF als Volltext |
Sprache | englisch |
Dokumenttyp | gedruckt; online; Monographie |
Schlagwörter | Quantitative Daten; Academic Persistence; Community Colleges; Comparative Analysis; Courses; Dropout Research; Dropouts; Enrollment Influences; Participant Satisfaction; Questionnaires; Student Attitudes; Student Characteristics; Trend Analysis; Two Year College Students; Two Year Colleges; Withdrawal (Education) |
Abstract | A study was conducted at William Rainey Harper College (WRHC) in Illinois to develop a profile of students who withdrew from courses between summer 1990 and spring 1992. For the 2-year period studied, each degree credit student who officially withdrew from a course was asked to complete a survey form, indicating withdrawal status, whether a counselor had been consulted, principal reason for withdrawal, method of registration, and general comments. Between 1990 and 1992, 13.4% of the 170,000 course enrollments resulted in official withdrawals, representing a 0.4% decrease in withdrawals from the 1988-1990 cohort. An analysis of these withdrawals indicated the following: (1) one out of every five course withdrawals resulted in complete withdrawal from WRHC, although nearly three-fourths of the students who withdrew planned to return to WRHC in the future; (2) nearly 30% of those withdrawing gave reasons completely beyond WRHC's control, and only 7% indicated WRHC as the primary cause for withdrawal; (3) the major reasons cited for withdrawals included personal, family, or health problems, too far behind/poor grades, inconvenient meeting times, or job pressures; (4) there continued to be a lower percentage of withdrawals during the summer semester than during the spring and fall semesters (11% versus 14%); (5) about 40% of the withdrawing students indicated that they had never consulted a counselor in the 2 years previous to withdrawal; and (6) overall, younger students continued to have a higher withdrawal rate than students over the age of 25. Extensive data tables and the survey instrument are included. (MAB) |
Erfasst von | ERIC (Education Resources Information Center), Washington, DC |