An exploration of factors influencing undergraduate student engagement at a UK university

Educational institutions have a vested interest in learners being engaged in the teaching and learning process. A significant aspect of this would appear to be attendance; however, it is clearly not the only way of being engaged. Universities are no exception to this interest and we, as a course tea...

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Main Authors: Richard Millican, Tristan Middleton, Tyrone Perry-Harry, Luci Holmes, Jorja Bond, Ohoud Abdalla
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The International Education Studies Association 2023-12-01
Series:Educational Futures
Subjects:
Online Access:https://educationstudies.org.uk/?p=25070
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author Richard Millican
Tristan Middleton
Tyrone Perry-Harry
Luci Holmes
Jorja Bond
Ohoud Abdalla
author_facet Richard Millican
Tristan Middleton
Tyrone Perry-Harry
Luci Holmes
Jorja Bond
Ohoud Abdalla
author_sort Richard Millican
collection DOAJ
description Educational institutions have a vested interest in learners being engaged in the teaching and learning process. A significant aspect of this would appear to be attendance; however, it is clearly not the only way of being engaged. Universities are no exception to this interest and we, as a course team of an undergraduate course in the UK, have also had concerns about our students’ engagement. In the hope of discovering things that we might do to try to improve engagement, this small-scale research project worked with some of our students as co-researchers to explore student understanding of engagement and the influences on their attendance, contributions and completion of post-session extension activities. Gathered through a series of three questionnaires and some follow-up interviews, the data revealed that, although some students felt that staying at home to complete assessments showed engagement, most believed that engagement meant attending, contributing and taking an active part in sessions. Principal influences on engagement were found to be both external to the university: student attitude to learning, self-perception, time management, health, finances and travel arrangements; and internal: pedagogy, assessment demands, learning environment and session content. These findings suggest that there is a need to consider carefully those influences that the university might have some control over and reflect on the way that learning environments are constructed; pedagogy is employed; student-student and staff-student relationships are developed; modules, classes and assessments are interlinked; institutional, course, staff and student expectations are shared; and student skill and attitude to learning are supported.
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spelling doaj-art-96c5e7a3e6f14062a8900a8e22371dc82025-08-20T03:15:27ZengThe International Education Studies AssociationEducational Futures1758-21992023-12-011422960An exploration of factors influencing undergraduate student engagement at a UK universityRichard Millican0Tristan Middleton1Tyrone Perry-Harry2Luci Holmes3Jorja Bond4Ohoud Abdalla5University of Gloucestershire, UKUniversity of Gloucestershire, UKUniversity of Gloucestershire, UKUniversity of Gloucestershire, UKUniversity of Gloucestershire, UKUniversity of Gloucestershire, UKEducational institutions have a vested interest in learners being engaged in the teaching and learning process. A significant aspect of this would appear to be attendance; however, it is clearly not the only way of being engaged. Universities are no exception to this interest and we, as a course team of an undergraduate course in the UK, have also had concerns about our students’ engagement. In the hope of discovering things that we might do to try to improve engagement, this small-scale research project worked with some of our students as co-researchers to explore student understanding of engagement and the influences on their attendance, contributions and completion of post-session extension activities. Gathered through a series of three questionnaires and some follow-up interviews, the data revealed that, although some students felt that staying at home to complete assessments showed engagement, most believed that engagement meant attending, contributing and taking an active part in sessions. Principal influences on engagement were found to be both external to the university: student attitude to learning, self-perception, time management, health, finances and travel arrangements; and internal: pedagogy, assessment demands, learning environment and session content. These findings suggest that there is a need to consider carefully those influences that the university might have some control over and reflect on the way that learning environments are constructed; pedagogy is employed; student-student and staff-student relationships are developed; modules, classes and assessments are interlinked; institutional, course, staff and student expectations are shared; and student skill and attitude to learning are supported.https://educationstudies.org.uk/?p=25070absenteeismstudent attendancestudent contributionsstudent engagementstudent participation
spellingShingle Richard Millican
Tristan Middleton
Tyrone Perry-Harry
Luci Holmes
Jorja Bond
Ohoud Abdalla
An exploration of factors influencing undergraduate student engagement at a UK university
Educational Futures
absenteeism
student attendance
student contributions
student engagement
student participation
title An exploration of factors influencing undergraduate student engagement at a UK university
title_full An exploration of factors influencing undergraduate student engagement at a UK university
title_fullStr An exploration of factors influencing undergraduate student engagement at a UK university
title_full_unstemmed An exploration of factors influencing undergraduate student engagement at a UK university
title_short An exploration of factors influencing undergraduate student engagement at a UK university
title_sort exploration of factors influencing undergraduate student engagement at a uk university
topic absenteeism
student attendance
student contributions
student engagement
student participation
url https://educationstudies.org.uk/?p=25070
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