| New Data
on Student Engagement Reveals Both Promising and Disturbing
News Results of this year’s
National Survey of Student Engagement (NSSE) and the newer
Community College Survey of Student Engagement (CCSSE) were
released in November and reveal both promising and disturbing
trends in how engaged in their learning today’s college
students really are. The NSSE study, “Converting Data
Into Action: Expanding the Boundaries of Institutional Improvement,”
provides data drawn from 185,000 first-year and senior students
at 649 four-year colleges and universities. It measures students’
own assessment of how engaged they are in their learning and
is based on five benchmarks including: 1) level of academic
challenge; 2) active and collaborative learning; 3) student-faculty
interaction; 4) enriching educational experiences; and 5)
supportive campus environment.
Modeled on the older NSSE surveys, the newer Community College
Survey of Student Engagement provides data drawn from 65,300
students at 93 community colleges. Unlike the NSSE survey
of four-year institutions, participants in the CCSSE must
agree to make data about their institutions public. The CCSSE
survey is also constructed around five benchmarks: 1) active
learning; 2) student-faculty interaction; 3) student effort;
4) level of academic challenge; and 5) support for learners.
The CCSSE reveals some interesting findings that suggest that
community college students are more engaged than their four-year
college counterparts on some benchmarks (e.g. collaborative
learning), while on other benchmarks (e.g. student-faculty
interaction), they are less engaged.
FINDINGS
National Survey of Student
Engagement
- Eighty-seven percent of all students
surveyed rated their college experience “good”
or “excellent.”
- About two-thirds of seniors participated
in community service or volunteer work at least once during
college. Women (75 percent) are more likely than men (62
percent) to do community service or volunteer work.
- A majority of seniors (58 percent)
report that they completed a culminating senior experience.
Seventy-two percent report that they participated in a practicum,
internship, field experience, or co-op experience.
- Almost nine of ten students (87
percent) report that their peers at least “sometimes”
copy and paste information from the Web or Internet into
reports/papers without citing the source.
- Men are disproportionately under-engaged,
particularly in the areas of academic challenge and enriching
educational experiences.
- More than two-fifths of first-year
students “never” discuss ideas from their classes
or readings with a faculty member outside the classroom.
- Less than half of seniors frequently
have serious conversations with students from different
racial or ethnic backgrounds.
- Only about 13 percent of full-time
students spent more than 25 hours a week preparing for class,
the approximate number that faculty members say is needed
to do well in college.
- More than half of all part-time
students (51 percent of first-year students, 61 percent
of seniors) work off-campus more than 20 hours per week.
Community College
Survey of Student Engagement
- Forty-eight percent of community college students worked
with classmates on projects "often" or "very
often" which is six percentage points higher than
first-year students at four-year colleges.
- Almost two-thirds (64 percent) of two-year college students
report that they ask questions or contribute to class discussions
either "often" or "very often" compared with 59 percent of first-year
students at four-year colleges and universities.
- About 45 percent of community college students discussed
grades or assignments with a professor either "often" or "very
often," compared with 50 percent of first-year and 60 percent
of seniors at four-year institutions.
- Forty-five percent of full-time community college students
report working more than 20 hours per week off-campus.
- Nearly a third (32 percent) of community college students
surveyed work more than 30 hours per week.
- More than one-fifth (21 percent) of community college
student respondents have children living at home; 29 percent
spend eleven hours or more per week caring for dependents.
- Only 12 percent of full-time community college students
said they spent 21 or more hours per week studying for a
class, and seventy-three percent said they came to class
unprepared at least some of the time. Seventy percent of
community college students, however, report that their colleges
encouraged them to spend significant amounts of time studying.
Integrative Learning
at Four-Year and Community Colleges
- To estimate the degree to which students took part in
activities that provide opportunities to integrate their
curricular and co-curricular experiences, NSSE created a
scale of integration using six NSSE questions. Integration
is a very strong predictor of engagement, satisfaction,
and self-reported gains. For instance, the higher the integration
score, the more likely a student is to: interact with faculty,
experience diversity, and report their courses emphasize
higher-order thinking.
- Almost 87 percent of seniors at four-year colleges frequently
integrate ideas or information from various sources into
papers or projects.
- About four-fifths of seniors at four-year colleges said
their classes placed a good deal of emphasis on applying
theories or concepts to practical problems.
- Women, seniors, and students attending Baccalaureate Liberal
Arts Colleges tend to engage more frequently in activities
that require integration.
- Traditional-age students, student-athletes, and students
living on-campus are less engaged in integrative activities
at four-year colleges.
- Sixty percent of community college students surveyed reported
that they “often” or “very often”
worked on a paper or project that required integrating ideas
or information from various sources.
- Business and Engineering Majors at four-year institutions
are well below their counterparts in other fields in the
frequency with which they engage in integrative activities.
For the complete findings
from the NSSE 2003 report, see www.iub.edu/~nsse.
For the complete findings from the CCSSE 2003 report,
see www.ccsse.org.
For information about the project,
Integrative Learning: Opportunities to connect, co-sponsored
by AAC&U and the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement
of Teaching, see www.aacu.org/integrative_learning.
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DID
YOU KNOW?
-
Women at single-sex colleges are more engaged than their
counterparts at other types of institutions.
-
More than a third of all seniors at four-year institutions
only “occasionally” get prompt feedback from
faculty members.
-
African American, Latino/a, and American Indian students
at community colleges report higher aspirations than their
white peers.
-
Community college minority students planned to transfer
to a four-year institution at a higher rate (57 percent)
than did white students (43 percent).
-
Community college minority students report higher levels
of interaction with professors and better use of academic
advising than did their white counterparts.
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