Examining the experiences of students enrolled in small community colleges by time of enrollment

The purpose of this study was to examine the experiences of students enrolled in small community colleges to determine if there was a difference in the degree to which students were engaged based upon their primary enrollment in day or in evening courses. Specifically, the study investigated the am...

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Main Author: Head, Traci Lynn, 1969-
Other Authors: Roueche, John E.
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/3721
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-37212015-09-20T16:52:34ZExamining the experiences of students enrolled in small community colleges by time of enrollmentHead, Traci Lynn, 1969-Community college studentsEvening and continuation school studentsCommunity college students--AttitudesEvening and continuation school students--AttitudesMotivation in educationThe purpose of this study was to examine the experiences of students enrolled in small community colleges to determine if there was a difference in the degree to which students were engaged based upon their primary enrollment in day or in evening courses. Specifically, the study investigated the amount of time and effort students dedicated to their academic pursuits and the degree to which institutional policies and practices supported them in their efforts to determine whether time of enrollment was a significant factor in predicting engagement. The primary goals of the study were to contribute to the understanding of students' experiences and to provide empirical evidence that might serve as the foundation for program development and reform. The findings from the quantitative analysis revealed a significant predictive relationship between time of enrollment and five of the fourteen engagement variables considered in the study. Enrollment in evening courses was linked to lower levels of engagement in each of these five areas: student effort, academic challenge, support for learners, academic preparation, and school opinions. The results of the study supported the development of a theoretical model that depicts student engagement based upon primary enrollment in evening courses. The model places support for learners at the forefront. Students' opinions are the end result, with each of the other engagement variables being affected by the levels of support perceived by evening students.Roueche, John E.2008-08-29T00:05:57Z2008-08-29T00:05:57Z2007-122008-08-29T00:05:57ZThesiselectronichttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/3721212415163engCopyright © is held by the author. Presentation of this material on the Libraries' web site by University Libraries, The University of Texas at Austin was made possible under a limited license grant from the author who has retained all copyrights in the works.
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Community college students
Evening and continuation school students
Community college students--Attitudes
Evening and continuation school students--Attitudes
Motivation in education
spellingShingle Community college students
Evening and continuation school students
Community college students--Attitudes
Evening and continuation school students--Attitudes
Motivation in education
Head, Traci Lynn, 1969-
Examining the experiences of students enrolled in small community colleges by time of enrollment
description The purpose of this study was to examine the experiences of students enrolled in small community colleges to determine if there was a difference in the degree to which students were engaged based upon their primary enrollment in day or in evening courses. Specifically, the study investigated the amount of time and effort students dedicated to their academic pursuits and the degree to which institutional policies and practices supported them in their efforts to determine whether time of enrollment was a significant factor in predicting engagement. The primary goals of the study were to contribute to the understanding of students' experiences and to provide empirical evidence that might serve as the foundation for program development and reform. The findings from the quantitative analysis revealed a significant predictive relationship between time of enrollment and five of the fourteen engagement variables considered in the study. Enrollment in evening courses was linked to lower levels of engagement in each of these five areas: student effort, academic challenge, support for learners, academic preparation, and school opinions. The results of the study supported the development of a theoretical model that depicts student engagement based upon primary enrollment in evening courses. The model places support for learners at the forefront. Students' opinions are the end result, with each of the other engagement variables being affected by the levels of support perceived by evening students.
author2 Roueche, John E.
author_facet Roueche, John E.
Head, Traci Lynn, 1969-
author Head, Traci Lynn, 1969-
author_sort Head, Traci Lynn, 1969-
title Examining the experiences of students enrolled in small community colleges by time of enrollment
title_short Examining the experiences of students enrolled in small community colleges by time of enrollment
title_full Examining the experiences of students enrolled in small community colleges by time of enrollment
title_fullStr Examining the experiences of students enrolled in small community colleges by time of enrollment
title_full_unstemmed Examining the experiences of students enrolled in small community colleges by time of enrollment
title_sort examining the experiences of students enrolled in small community colleges by time of enrollment
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/3721
work_keys_str_mv AT headtracilynn1969 examiningtheexperiencesofstudentsenrolledinsmallcommunitycollegesbytimeofenrollment
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