Adult Students at Two-Year Colleges: A Longitudinal Study
- 1 April 1977
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Community Junior College Research Quarterly
- Vol. 1 (3) , 271-287
- https://doi.org/10.1080/03616975.1977.10588082
Abstract
Adults constitute a continually increasing proportion of students at two-year colleges. While adult students presumably have special needs, little is known about them. This study focused on the characteristics and needs of 17,137 students enrolled in 100 randomly selected two-year colleges across the country, separately for different age levels. Using a wide variety of variables collected at entrance, after one term, at graduation, and three years after graduation, differences by sex among the following four age groups were ascertained: age 19 or younger, 20–24, 25–39, and 40 or older. Major trends with age, differences among age groups, and interactions between age and sex were found for a number of variables: abilities, grades, attrition, self-perceptions, aspirations and goals, competencies, job values and preferences, satisfaction with and rating of various aspects of the college, expressed needs for help, extracurricular participation, outside work during school, postgraduate jobs obtained and how obtained, job satisfaction, percent going to and graduating from four-year programs, and preference for entering a two-year program if they had to do it all over again. Adult students do have many special needs that vary with age level. We think a repeat of the study but comparing across other groupings of adults would be desirable, even though extreme diversity also exists within such groups. Another consideration is that many new kinds of adult students will in the future be entering postsecondary education in large numbers.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Relationship Between: G.A.T.B. Aptitude Scores and Age for AdultsThe Personnel and Guidance Journal, 1963
- Some Characteristics of Adult Part-Time StudentsAdult Education, 1959