https://www.insidehighered.com/news/2011/01/18/study_finds_large_numbers_of_college_students_don_t_learn_much

'Academically Adrift'

by Scott Jaschik, January 18, 2011

If the purpose of a college education is for students to learn, academe 
is failing, according to Academically Adrift: Limited Learning on 
College Campuses, [1] a book being released today by University of 
Chicago Press.

The book cites data from student surveys and transcript analysis to show 
that many college students have minimal classwork expectations -- and 
then it tracks the academic gains (or stagnation) of 2,300 students of 
traditional college age enrolled at a range of four-year colleges and 
universities. The students took the Collegiate Learning Assessment [2] 
(which is designed to measure gains in critical thinking, analytic 
reasoning and other "higher level" skills taught at college) at various 
points before and during their college educations, and the results are 
not encouraging:

45 percent of students "did not demonstrate any significant improvement 
in learning" during the first two years of college.

36 percent of students "did not demonstrate any significant improvement 
in learning" over four years of college.

Those students who do show improvements tend to show only modest 
improvements. Students improved on average only 0.18 standard deviations 
over the first two years of college and 0.47 over four years. What this 
means is that a student who entered college in the 50th percentile of 
students in his or her cohort would move up to the 68th percentile four 
years later -- but that's the 68th percentile of a new group of freshmen 
who haven't experienced any college learning.
"How much are students actually learning in contemporary higher 
education? The answer for many undergraduates, we have concluded, is not 
much," write the authors, Richard Arum, professor of sociology and 
education at New York University, and Josipa Roksa, assistant professor 
of sociology at the University of Virginia. For many undergraduates, 
they write, "drifting through college without a clear sense of purpose 
is readily apparent."


The research findings at the core of the book are also being released 
today by their sponsor, the Social Science Research Council. (Esther Cho 
of the council is a co-author on that paper.)

The main culprit for lack of academic progress of students, according to 
the authors, is a lack of rigor. They review data from student surveys 
to show, for example, that 32 percent of students each semester do not 
take any courses with more than 40 pages of reading assigned a week, and 
that half don't take a single course in which they must write more than 
20 pages over the course of a semester. Further, the authors note that 
students spend, on average, only about 12-14 hours a week studying, and 
that much of this time is studying in groups.

The research then goes on to find a direct relationship between rigor 
and gains in learning:

Students who study by themselves for more hours each week gain more 
knowledge -- while those who spend more time studying in peer groups see 
diminishing gains.

Students whose classes reflect high expectations (more than 40 pages of 
reading a week and more than 20 pages of writing a semester) gained more 
than other students.

Students who spend more time in fraternities and sororities show smaller 
gains than other students.

Students who engage in off-campus or extracurricular activities 
(including clubs and volunteer opportunities) have no notable gains or 
losses in learning.

Students majoring in liberal arts fields see "significantly higher gains 
in critical thinking, complex reasoning, and writing skills over time 
than students in other fields of study."

Students majoring in business, education, social work and communications 
showed the smallest gains. (The authors note that this could be more a 
reflection of more-demanding reading and writing assignments, on 
average, in the liberal arts courses than of the substance of the material.)

In section after section of the book and the research report, the 
authors focus on pushing students to work harder and worrying less about 
students' non-academic experiences. "[E]ducational practices associated 
with academic rigor improved student performance, while collegiate 
experiences associated with social engagement did not," the authors write.

In an interview, Arum said that the problems outlined in the book should 
be viewed as a moral challenge to higher education. Students who 
struggle to pay for college and emerge into a tough job market have a 
right to know that they have learned something, he said. "You can't have 
a democratic society when the elite -- the college-educated kids -- 
don't have these abilities to think critically," he said.

The book rejects the idea of federal mandates on testing or the 
curriculum, suggesting that such requirements rarely work. And the book 
acknowledges that many college educators and students don't yet see a 
crisis, given that students can enroll, earn good grades for four years, 
and graduate -- very much enjoying themselves in the process. But in an 
era when "the world has become unforgiving" to those who don't work hard 
or know how to think, Arum said that this may be a time to consider real 
change.

The culture of college needs to evolve, particularly with regard to 
"perverse institutional incentives" that reward colleges for enrolling 
and retaining students rather than for educating them. "It's a problem 
when higher education is driven by a student client model and 
institutions are chasing after bodies," he said.

The analysis in the book stresses that there is significant variation 
within institutions, not just among institutions, with students in some 
academic programs regularly outperforming others at the same campuses. 
Arum said this suggests that institutions can improve student learning 
by making sure that there is some consistency across disciplines in the 
rigor of requirements. "You need an internal culture that values 
learning," he said. "You have to have departments agree that they aren't 
handing out easy grades."

Further, he said that colleges need to shift attention away from 
measures of "social engagement" (everything that's not academic) and 
toward academic engagement, even if some of those measures of 
non-academic engagement help keep students engaged and enrolled. "It's a 
question of what outcome you want," he said. "If the outcome is student 
retention and student satisfaction, then engagement is a great strategy. 
If, however, you want to improve learning and enhance the academic 
substance of what you are up to, it is not necessarily a good strategy."

(If this sounds like a swipe at the National Survey of Student 
Engagement, Arum said it shouldn't be taken that way. He praises NSSE 
for asking questions that focus on the student experience, and says that 
many of NSSE's findings on the minimalist levels of academic work and 
studying are consistent with his own. Rather, he faults college 
administrators for paying little attention to those findings and more on 
NSSE measures of non-academic satisfaction.)

Arum acknowledged that the tough economy may be acting against reform, 
given that many professors report that increases in class size and 
course loads are leading them to cut down on the ambition of student 
assignments simply to keep up with grading. With fewer full-time 
positions, professors at many institutions "are overwhelmed," he said. 
But Arum challenged faculty members to be creative in finding ways to 
assign more writing and reading to students.

Distribution of the book is just starting, but there are signs it could 
generate buzz. The Social Science Research Council will host a panel [3] 
this week in Washington featuring experts on assessment and higher 
education, with representatives from leading think tanks and 
foundations. The book will also be discussed at next week's meeting of 
the Association of American Colleges and Universities.

Debra Humphreys, vice president for communications and public affairs of 
AAC&U, said that she viewed the book as "devastating" in its critique of 
higher education. Faculty members and administrators (not to mention 
students and parents) should be alarmed by how little learning the 
authors found to be taking place, she said. Humphreys also said that the 
findings should give pause to those anxious to push students through and 
award more degrees -- without perhaps giving enough attention to what 
happens during a college education.

"In the race to completion, there is this assumption that a credit is a 
credit is a credit, and when you get to the magic number of credits, you 
will have learned what you need to learn," she said. What this book 
shows, Humphreys added, is that "you can accumulate an awful lot of 
credits and not learn anything."

AAC&U programs have in the past stressed the value of academic rigor and 
also of engagement of students outside the classroom. Humphreys said 
that she agreed with the book that some activities students enjoy may 
not add to their learning. But she said it was important not to view all 
engagement activities in the same way. It is important, she said, "not 
to lump together activities such as being in a fraternity or just 
hanging out with friends" with activities such as extracurricular 
activities that may in fact be quite educational and important, even if 
not linked to a specific course.

Students could benefit especially, she feels, from the point in the book 
about the variation among those at the same institution. "I don't think 
we are doing well enough at helping them understand that choices 
matter," she said. "Choices in the academic courses they take, how much 
they are working outside the classroom, how much they are studying, how 
much they are partying -- that balance is important."

Links:
[1] http://www.press.uchicago.edu/presssite/metadata.epl?isbn=9780226028552
[2] http://www.collegiatelearningassessment.org/
[3] http://www.ssrc.org/events/
[4] https://www.insidehighered.com/news/focus/teaching-and-learning
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