Title: Online Student Survey: Why Students Drop Summer Courses
1Online Student Survey Why Students Drop Summer
Courses
- Summer Session Office
- Summer 2004
2Survey was conducted in Summer 2004
- Online survey was sent to students who enrolled
in CSU summer session and who dropped at least
one course.
- Sent to 4047 students
- Return rate was 12.9
- N 521
- No identifiers on the questionnaire but students
could respond only once.
3Class Level of Respondents
- Freshman 1.5 (8)
- Sophomore 10.6 (55)
- Junior 30.4 (158)
- Senior 46 (239)
- Other 11.4 (59)
- Other 37 were Graduate/Master level
4Type of Student andPast Attendance of CSU Summer
Session
- CSU admitted student 96.5 (499)
- Summer Only Student 1.4 (7)
- Other 2.1 (11)
- Attended past summers 37 (192)
- No, did not attend in the past 63 (328)
5Number of Courses Enrolled
- One 119 22.9
- Two 156 30.0
- Three 112 21.5
- Four 63 12.1
- Five plus 70 13.5
6When did students register(Check all that apply)
- Before spring break 118 23.8
- Mid March thru April 274 55.4
- In May 141 28.5
- In June 30 6.1
- In July 4 0.8
- Dont remember 31 6.3
- Missing 26
7Number of Courses Dropped
- One course 312 68.0
- Two courses 93 20.3
- Three courses 33 7.2
- Four courses 14 3.1
- Five plus courses 7 1.5
- Missing 62
8When did students drop(check all that apply)
- Before spring break 6 1.3
- Mid March thru April 44 9.6
- In May 212 46.1
- In June 179 38.9
- In July 38 8.3
- Dont remember 18 3.9
- Missing 60
9Dropped courses before they began
- Yes 333 66.9
- No 165 33.1
- If yes how many courses were dropped before
they began?
- One course 223 67.6
- Two courses 68 20.6
- Three courses 22 6.7
- Four plus courses 17 5.1
10Dropped Courses after they began
- Yes 157 31.7
- No 339 68.3
- If yes how many courses were dropped after they
began?
- One course 130 82.8
- Two courses 21 13.4
- Three courses 5 3.2
11Reasons for Dropping (check all that apply)
- Didnt have the 128 26.3
- Job took priority 125 25.7
- No financial aid 70 14.4
- Vacation, didnt need the class, pace too
accelerated, enrolled in too many credits 57-61
12
- Other 181 37.2
12Open-ended Responses N 261
- Too expensive 32 12.3
- Time conflicts (inconvenient, class too
early/late, classes overlapped) 31 12
- Conflict with work 31 12
- Personal Issues (death, illness) 26 10
- Instructor problems 26 10
- Took a different course 25 9.6
- Pace/workload too much 21 8
13Between Group Analyses 1
- Students who register early for summer courses
are the ones taking the largest load.
- Using the earliest time the students registered
with the of registered courses, a t-test was
performed
- Compared Before SP Break In May w/ of
registered courses significant at .05 level
- There was a decrease in the mean of courses as
students registered later.
14Between Group Analyses 2
- Students register for more courses than they plan
to take or they register for more courses than
they can handle.
- Pearson Correlation is positive .01 level
- The more courses students registered for the more
courses they dropped
15Between Group Analyses 3
- Students dont realize they are taking more than
they can manage if they have never taken summer
courses before
- T-test no significant difference between those
students who enrolled in past summer sessions and
those who enrolled for the first time regarding
of courses dropped.
16Between Group Analyses 4
- Students drop more courses before courses begin
- Paired t-test compared of courses dropped
before classes began w/ of courses dropped
after classes began significant at .01 level
- Students more likely to drop courses before
classes start
17Between Group Analyses 5
- The times when students drop courses correlate
with their reasons for dropping
- Pearson Chi-Square four correlations are
significant (p - Dropped before want time off job took priority
did not have the funds
- Dropped after pace of course too fast
18Conclusions
- Students enroll for SS later than we assumed 55
- between mid-March and end of April
- A fourth register early (before spring break a
fourth later (in May)
- The students who enroll early, register for the
most credits skews our SCH projection and
revenue projection
19Conclusions cont.
- 67 of students dropped before course(s) began
not assessed tuition no problems w/ withdrawal
policies
- 32 dropped after courses began of these, 83
dropped only one course
- Major reason for dropping after classes began
pace too fast.
20Discussion
- Communicate to students expect an accelerated
pace
- Most students dont enroll in 9 credits in the
summer session, thus . . .
- Students perceive that summer tuition is much
higher than fall/spring this is problematic.