(by Douglas Belkin, The Wall Street Journal) – Skipping class undetected for a game of ultimate Frisbee might become a thing of the past as more universities adopt mandatory-attendance policies and acquire high-tech trackers that snitch when students skip.
At Villanova University, student ID cards track attendance at some lectures. Administrators at University of Arkansas last semester began electronically monitoring the class attendance of 750 freshmen as part of a pilot program they might extend to all underclassman. …
The moves reflect the rising financial consequence of skipping too many classes and, consequently, dropping out. More than four in 10 full-time college students fail to graduate in six years. Many are stuck with crippling student debt and no credentials to help them pay it back. Graduation rates also figure into closely watched school rankings.
In response, schools are under pressure from taxpayers and parents to increase retention and graduation rates, said Mike Reilly, executive director of the American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers. Schoolwide policies on attendance [in colleges] are fairly rare but growing, Mr. Reilly said.
Many colleges are using “retention alert systems” that monitor behaviors that can lead to dropping out – including playing hooky. “There’s just so much more at stake now than there was 20 years ago and parents want to protect their investment; they want to make sure their kids are in class,” said Rosalind Alderman, who leads the retention effort at St. Mary’s University in San Antonio.
If professors report a student is skipping class at St. Mary’s the student’s “risk level” elevates from green to yellow to red in the school’s monitoring system.
The latest entrant into the market of tracking student’s whereabouts: Class120, a $199-a-year notification service that tracks a student through the GPS in their smartphone and alerts their parents (or another third party) in real time if their child isn’t within a geofence mapped around the classroom where they are scheduled to be.
“For most students, if they miss too many classes, there is no safety net,” said Jeff Whorley, whose company, Core Principle, has mapped about 2,000 college campuses to create the system. “Just three days of missed classes can completely unravel a semester.”
The app’s reminder was jarring for Caleb Hiltunen, a sophomore at Columbia College in Chicago who was a beta tester for Class120. One morning last semester he was sick in bed when the app pinged to alert him he missed class—a notification that would go to a student’s parents once the app is live.
“I think it’s good stuff,” Mr. Hiltunen said. “I had a roommate freshman year kicked out of college for not attending enough classes. This kid was smart but he was lazy and had no motivation. I think something like this could have helped him.”
Attendance is the best known predictor of college grades, even more so than scores on standardized admissions tests, said Marcus Crede, a professor of psychology at Iowa State University who studies the subject. The correlation is particularly high in science, engineering and math. And grades, in turn, seem linked to graduation rates, he said.
Mandatory attendance has long been a staple in high schools. At community colleges, such as Stark State in Ohio, financial aid is tied to attendance, a policy that dates back decades. …
At most four-year colleges, attendance policy has been left to the professors’ discretion. Until recently, taking roll was especially tough in large lecture halls. But new technologies using chips in student IDs and interactive software that allows students to engage with professors through their laptops make the job easier.
At Villanova, student monitoring of some form has been in place in some form since 2007.
As online interactions have grown, schools have realized they have a trove of new data to look at, such as how much a student is accessing the syllabus, taking part in online discussions with classmates and reading assigned material. Such technology “shows faculty exactly where students are interacting outside as well inside the classroom,” said Stephen Fugale, Villanova’s chief information officer.
Not all such technology is foolproof. Dartmouth College accused 64 students of cheating in a sports-ethics class last semester when students used a clicker – individually linked to each student – for classmates who were absent. …
University of Arkansas began experimenting with mandatory attendance as a way to boost its 62% six-year graduation rate, said Provost Sharon Gaber. “We talk about helicopter parents,” she said. “Well, some of these kids haven’t learned how to get out of bed on their own yet.”
Copyright 2015 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Reprinted here for educational purposes only. May not be reproduced on other websites without permission from The Wall Street Journal. Visit the website at wsj .com.
1. For what reason have colleges and universities begun to track students?
2. a) Define retention rate.
b) What are retention alert systems?
3. How does a tracking system like Class120 work? (who uses it?)
4. Aside from attendance, what other class related activities are colleges monitoring?
5. The reporter states that 40% of full-time college students don’t graduate in 6 years!
a) If a student pays his/her own way, is this ok? Explain your answer.
b) If a student’s parents pay the bill, is it ok? Explain your answer.
c) If the student gets financial aid (free money from the government paid for by taxpayers) is it ok? Explain your answer.
6. Answer the following and explain each one of your answers:
a) Should parents track their kids to ensure that they attend college classes?
b) At what point in life should a person take personal responsibility for his/her actions?
c) If a person chooses not to attend classes, what should a parent do? (use this type of tracking/monitoring system to help their kids go to class, make kids pay their own tuition, tell kids to get a job and start paying rent if they want to live at home, etc.)
d) Do you think the rates of students skipping class are the same for those whose parents pay their college tuition, those who get a “free ride” from the government and those who pay their own way through college? Explain your answer.
e) Would you support or oppose being tracked throughout your college career as a way to force you to go to class?
f) What other way could parents ensure their kids attend their college classes (instead of tracking their movements)?
7. Ask a grandparent to read this article and share his/her opinion on the wisdom of tracking students to ensure they attend their classes.
And at Harvard, researchers secretly filmed classrooms to learn how many students were skipping lectures. Vice Provost Peter Bol said the lecture halls were filmed without student consent to gauge attendance without skewing the results by making students aware they were being measured. Many on campus were angered when the results were made public in November, but the test provided some insight into class attendance.
Among 10 lectures monitored, attendance averaged 60%, declining from 79% as the semester began to 43% as it ended. Attendance also fell more than 10 percentage points over an average week. Courses that incorporated attendance into the final grade averaged 87%, compared with 49% for those that didn’t. (from the wsj article above)