Mature students' perception of stress on returning to learn

In this thesis we present a theoretical model for mature students' perception of stress. The study examines the sources of institutional, dispositional and situational stress of students who are age thirty-to fifty-five. The research involved mature students in England (Yorkshire) and the Unite...

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Main Author: Leger, Ellen
Published: University of Leeds 1996
Subjects:
370
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.513995
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5139952015-03-20T03:37:48ZMature students' perception of stress on returning to learnLeger, Ellen1996In this thesis we present a theoretical model for mature students' perception of stress. The study examines the sources of institutional, dispositional and situational stress of students who are age thirty-to fifty-five. The research involved mature students in England (Yorkshire) and the United States of America (Minnesota). The stress inquiry is phenomenological action research with an interpretive and empirical approach. The design included in-depth interviews (N=60) and application of a questionnaire (N=382). The respondents were asked to describe 'what is it like to be a student at this time in his or her life. The data collected included perceptions of the student experience, institutional support, personal reactions to returning to learn, balancing family, work and study roles, primary sources of stress, change and transition experienced, evidence of psychological support, healthy and energy levels, and coping strategies. The study results indicate the primary sources of stress are managing roles, time management and institutional management of coursework. Students in the study did not report increased illness while returning to learn but did report fatigue. Significant gender-country differences include management of roles, workplace support, sources of funding, student status, and physical exercise as a coping strategy. Gender-country similarities include reactions to returning to learn, institutional support, response to change, psychological support, health and energy status, and personal status. The inquiry has implications for counselling mature students on stress and time management, instructional management of coursework, and recommendation for facility improvements to support efficient and effective learning. Education institutions have and will continue to experience increased mature student enrolment. This research provides specific information on the student experience with the institution, the student-self and the balancing of work, family, and study.370University of Leedshttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.513995http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/420/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 370
spellingShingle 370
Leger, Ellen
Mature students' perception of stress on returning to learn
description In this thesis we present a theoretical model for mature students' perception of stress. The study examines the sources of institutional, dispositional and situational stress of students who are age thirty-to fifty-five. The research involved mature students in England (Yorkshire) and the United States of America (Minnesota). The stress inquiry is phenomenological action research with an interpretive and empirical approach. The design included in-depth interviews (N=60) and application of a questionnaire (N=382). The respondents were asked to describe 'what is it like to be a student at this time in his or her life. The data collected included perceptions of the student experience, institutional support, personal reactions to returning to learn, balancing family, work and study roles, primary sources of stress, change and transition experienced, evidence of psychological support, healthy and energy levels, and coping strategies. The study results indicate the primary sources of stress are managing roles, time management and institutional management of coursework. Students in the study did not report increased illness while returning to learn but did report fatigue. Significant gender-country differences include management of roles, workplace support, sources of funding, student status, and physical exercise as a coping strategy. Gender-country similarities include reactions to returning to learn, institutional support, response to change, psychological support, health and energy status, and personal status. The inquiry has implications for counselling mature students on stress and time management, instructional management of coursework, and recommendation for facility improvements to support efficient and effective learning. Education institutions have and will continue to experience increased mature student enrolment. This research provides specific information on the student experience with the institution, the student-self and the balancing of work, family, and study.
author Leger, Ellen
author_facet Leger, Ellen
author_sort Leger, Ellen
title Mature students' perception of stress on returning to learn
title_short Mature students' perception of stress on returning to learn
title_full Mature students' perception of stress on returning to learn
title_fullStr Mature students' perception of stress on returning to learn
title_full_unstemmed Mature students' perception of stress on returning to learn
title_sort mature students' perception of stress on returning to learn
publisher University of Leeds
publishDate 1996
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.513995
work_keys_str_mv AT legerellen maturestudentsperceptionofstressonreturningtolearn
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