ED-PHLGAPMLMar 22, 2020

Quantifying the relationship between student enrollment patterns and student performance

arXiv:2003.10874v42 citations
AI Analysis

This work addresses the impact of enrollment strategies on student outcomes for universities, but it is incremental as it builds on prior research with a more nuanced analysis.

The paper tackled the problem of how student enrollment patterns affect academic performance by applying a Hidden Markov Model to categorize students into full-time, part-time, and mixed-enrollment strategies, finding that mixed-enrollment students perform closer to full-time students and have significantly better outcomes than part-time students, with transfer students showing more than double the graduation rate compared to part-time enrollment.

Simplified categorizations have often led to college students being labeled as full-time or part-time students. However, at many universities student enrollment patterns can be much more complicated, as it is not uncommon for students to alternate between full-time and part-time enrollment each semester based on finances, scheduling, or family needs. While prior research has established full-time students maintain better outcomes then their part-time counterparts, limited study has examined the impact of enrollment patterns or strategies on academic outcomes. In this paper, we applying a Hidden Markov Model to identify and cluster students' enrollment strategies into three different categorizes: full-time, part-time, and mixed-enrollment strategies. Based the enrollment strategies we investigate and compare the academic performance outcomes of each group, taking into account differences between first-time-in-college students and transfer students. Analysis of data collected from the University of Central Florida from 2008 to 2017 indicates that first-time-in-college students that apply a mixed enrollment strategy are closer in performance to full-time students, as compared to part-time students. More importantly, during their part-time semesters, mixed-enrollment students significantly outperform part-time students. Similarly, analysis of transfer students shows that a mixed-enrollment strategy is correlated a similar graduation rates as the full-time enrollment strategy, and more than double the graduation rate associated with part-time enrollment. Such a finding suggests that increased engagement through the occasional full-time enrollment leads to better overall outcomes.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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