1 / 18

Do OU Students Work Too Much? …And Other Questions

Do OU Students Work Too Much? …And Other Questions. Using Institutional Data to Improve University Policy. Reuben Ternes OIRA October, 2013 Contact: ternes@oakland.edu. OIRA Office of Institutional Research and Assessment We have lots of cool data about OU students.

flynn
Download Presentation

Do OU Students Work Too Much? …And Other Questions

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Do OU Students Work Too Much? …And Other Questions Using Institutional Data to Improve University Policy Reuben Ternes OIRA October, 2013 Contact: ternes@oakland.edu

  2. OIRA • Office of Institutional Research and Assessment • We have lots of cool data about OU students. • Our primary job is to conduct research about OU students, and to disseminate this information to the campus community. • We’re also in charge of some assessment related activities. • www.oakland.edu/OIRA OIRA What?

  3. We have two primary types of research • 1) Surveys • Graduation Survey • Student Satisfaction Surveys • NSSE (Nessie) • CIRP • CLA (Collegiate Learning Assessment) • 2) Internal Research • Do our need-based financial aid policies improve retention rates? • Should all students take 16 credits their first semester, regardless of their ACT score? • Do students that get AP credit for the first course in a sequence have just as much success as students that take the entire sequence here at OU? What Kind of Research?

  4. We also compile the university’s official statistics. • Student Profiles (i.e., who are OU students?) • Retention Rates • Graduation Rates • Progress to Degree • Enrollment data • Degree data • Distribution of Grades • All of this information is available on our website: • www.oakland.edu/OIRA What Else Does OIRA Do?

  5. CIRP = Cooperative Institutional Research Project • The CIRP Survey asks students a whole bunch of questions about • Behaviors • Attitudes • Values • Expectations • Also covers some demographic data • Usually taken during freshmen orientation • Mostly, we find that we are more similar to other institutions than we are dissimilar. CIRP Survey

  6. Drank beer during senior year

  7. OU students’ political views

  8. College student survey that assesses the extent to which students engage in educational practices associated with high levels of learning and development • Administered every two years. (Sometimes more often). • Complete data is available on OIRA’s website. • All data is for 1st year students unless otherwise noted. • Peer comparison is other public institutions in our regional area (Great Lakes). NSSE Survey National Survey of Student Engagement (NSSE: pronounced ‘nessie’)

  9. Time Spent Preparing for Class

  10. Quality of Interactions with Advisors

  11. Full NSSE results are displayed on our website. • It’s super fun to explore • And it can help with various class projects. • For Example: What Can NSSE Tell Us?

  12. Another Way of Looking at the Same Data

  13. Periodically, OIRA releases some of its internal research, in a format that we call ‘Spotlight on OU.’ • All of our Spotlights can be found online. • One of these Spotlights uses NSSE data to show the relationship between retention rate and the number of reported off-campus working hours for freshmen students. • There are 4 main findings that I want to talk about today. Is Working Off-Campus Bad?

  14. Is there a relationship between first-year retention rates and off-campus working hours? • Not really. Or, if there is, the impact is relatively small. • (2007 & 2009 NSSE Data) • (2013 NSSE Data shows the same basic patterns, though retention rate is higher for all groups). Finding #1

  15. Is there a relationship between off-campus working hours and the rate that students return with sophomore status? • Yes. (χ2 = 14.7, p < 0.05, df = 7) • Students that work more hours do not appear to accumulate as many credits. • (2007 & 2009 NSSE Data) • (2013 NSSE Data shows the same basic patterns, though sophomore return rate is higher for all groups). Finding #2

  16. Students that reported more working hours, also reported taking less credits during their first term. • This isn’t really very surprising. • (2007 & 2009 NSSE Data) Finding #3

  17. What about GPA? • There does not appear to be any relationship between off-campus working hours and student GPAs. Finding #4

  18. The main issue with students that work many hours, is that their progress towards graduation is significantly slower. • Instead of taking 4 years, they take 6. • Some research (both internal and external) suggests that accumulating credits too slowly may ultimately deter students from completing their degree. • It is difficult to know the life situations of all of our students, so, the question might not be answerable. • However, from a university perspective, we want to encourage students to complete as many credits as they can, each semester. • Internal research also suggests that, when we set higher expectations, students tend to meet those expectations. Do OU Students Work Too Much?

More Related