Associations of Student Characteristics and Course Organization
Factors with Dropping out of University Distance and Online
Learning
Louise Sauvé
1
, Cathia Papi
1
, Serge Gérin-Lajoie
1
and Guillaume Desjardins
2
1
Education Department, Université TÉLUQ, 455, Rue du Parvis, GIK 9H6, Québec (QC), Canada
2
Industrial Relations Department, Université du Québec en Outaouais, 283, boul. Alexandre-Taché,
J8X 3X7, Gatineau (QC), Canada
Keywords: Dropout, University Studies, Courses, Distance and Online Learning, Socio-demographic Variables,
Academic Variables, Environmental Conditions, Pedagogical Organization.
Abstract: Distance and online learning (DOL) is becoming a must for university education in times of pandemic. In this
context, it is important to take into account the factors that can influence students’ perseverance in, or dropout
from, university studies. Not all of these factors are unanimously accepted in DOL research. This study, of
791 undergraduate students in 2018-19 enrolled in a francophone DOL institution, concludes that the factors
influencing dropout from DOL are as much related to the personal characteristics of the students and to their
learning strategies as to the pedagogical design of the course.
1 INTRODUCTION
Distance and Online Learning (DOL), which had
become an important course offering component for
higher education institutions before the current
pandemic, is now a crucial way for their students to
complete their studies. However, research indicates
that the dropout rate for DOL students is higher than
for on-campus students (Fortin, Joanis, & Ragued,
2019).
Longstanding research on university dropouts has
mainly studied on-campus learning, identifying
multiple conditions likely to influence student
attrition, including student-related factors,
environmental factors, and course and program-
related factors (Sauvé, Papi, Gérin-Lajoie, &
Desjardins, 2020).
Research on DOL has identified variables that are
similar to those for on-campus learning but with
effects that differ in importance (Facchin & Boisvert,
2019; Li, & Wong, 2019). Moreover, these studies
often consider only a few of the many dimensions
influencing a student's life and path (McDougall,
2019). No scholar has examined all relevant factors,
although they have recommended doing so when their
results were not significant.
For this study, we hypothesized that the learner's
decision to interrupt his or her DOL studies is the
result of a complex process that cannot be attributed
to a single cause, but rather to a set of factors whose
weights vary according to the learner's
characteristics. Based on this hypothesis, we
formulated the following question: "Are there
associations between students’ background and
academic characteristics, the environment in which
they are studying, their learning strategies, the ways
in which their courses are organized, and their
decision to drop a course or not to re-enroll after two
sessions of undergraduate studies?
To answer this question, we analyzed the
respective associations between students' dropping
out and their socio-demographic characteristics (e.g.,
age, gender, marital status, family situation, mother
tongue, citizenship), academic variables (e.g., study
regime, parental education, distance from home,
disability), environmental characteristics (e.g.,
support from family and friends, financial
and work
situations), learning strategies, and pedagogical
organization of their DOL courses.
We begin this paper with a brief review of the
DOL literature on variables found to be associated
with dropping out of university courses or of school
Sauvé, L., Papi, C., Gérin-Lajoie, S. and Desjardins, G.
Associations of Student Characteristics and Course Organization Factors with Dropping out of University Distance and Online Learning.
DOI: 10.5220/0010442304670474
In Proceedings of the 13th International Conference on Computer Supported Education (CSEDU 2021) - Volume 1, pages 467-474
ISBN: 978-989-758-502-9
Copyright
c
2021 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
467
altogether. We then present the methodology and
results of the study.
2 DROPPING OUT OF DOL
Although dropping out of university is an important
issue, data on DOL dropout rates are not consistently
published by Canadian universities. Most studies
indicate that student perseverance is lower in distance
education than in face-to-face learning (Sauvé et al.,
2020).
Reported DOL dropout rates can vary greatly,
depending on the definitions on which they are based
and whether they relate to programs or courses, the
time of data collection, the time period studied, and,
the calculation methods used. As a result, authors
have suggested that the DOL dropout rate varies from
25% to 40% (Bistodeau, & Mottet, 2017; Bonin,
2018).
Similarly, limited data are available on dropout
rates for individual DOL university courses. Xu, &
Jaggars (2011) indicate rates of 8% to 14% while
Paquelin (2016) finds that 9.5% of distance students
drop out, compared to 5.3% of on-campus students.
3 VARIABLES ASSOCIATED
WITH DROPPING OUT
Much of the research on university dropouts uses
socio-demographic and academic variables to
describe study populations. Some studies examine
these variables in relation to dimensions such as
learning strategies, environmental conditions or the
DOL learning environment (Audet, 2008; Lee, Choi,
& Kim, 2013). To better identify associations with
student attrition, we selected the variables that seem
to have the greatest impact on dropping out of DOL,
as follows.
3.1 Socio-demographic Variables
Age. Stone (2017) reports DOL studies in which older
age is correlated with success in distance education,
perhaps due to greater maturity and self-regulation.
Conversely, Prinsloo, Muller, and Du Plessis (2010)
consider students over the age of thirty to be at risk of
dropping out, possibly due to a higher overall
workload. Finally, Bonin (2018) argues that since
persistence decreases with age: younger students
have a better chance of continuing on to graduation.
Gender. Gender seems to be more important than age
or location in the attrition of post-secondary students
(Vogel et al., 2018). More specifically, men drop out
of DOL courses or university studies at greater rates
than women (Bonin, 2018; Paquelin, 2016). Mixed
results regarding gender have also been obtained
(Eliasquevici, Seruffo, & Resque, 2017).
Marital and Family Status. Married or common-
law students with dependent children are more likely
to drop out of their post-secondary DOL programs
than are single students without dependent children
(Bonin, 2018; Shah, & Cheng, 2019).
The variables citizenship and first language
seem not to have been addressed in DOL persistence
research. In one study, however, language or a
language barrier is cited as the main obstacle to
success in courses for immigrants (Stoessel, Ihme,
Barbarino, Fisseler, & Stürmer, 2015).
3.2 Academic Variables
Study Regime. Before the pandemic, DOL students
were generally adults whose living situations
(employment, family commitments, etc.) lead them to
enroll in
only a limited number of courses per year.
Their learning program therefore
extended over a
longer period, which is more conducive to dropping
out of school (Sauvé, Fortin, Landry, & Viger, 2015).
Bonin (2018) concluded that under similar living and
study conditions, taking distance education courses at
the undergraduate level on a part-time basis is
associated with a greater risk of dropping out.
Parents' Level of Education. Since we could not
find any studies on this variable in relation to
dropping out of university-level DOL, we examined
what the research on this variable says in the context
of face-to-face, on-campus learning.
Higher parental education level is correlated with
the likelihood that the student will pursue post-
secondary education. (Murdoch, Kamanzi, & Doray,
2011; Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development, 2017). In fact, it seems that this factor
is more of a determinant than family income and
living environment (Murdoch et al., 2011). A
nuanced conclusion is provided by Berger, Motte, and
Parkin (2009), who link parental education level with
family income to explain dropping out of school.
Disability. In 2019-2020, more than 19,000 students
who declared themselves to be disabled were
pursuing studies in Quebec universities (Gagné, &
Bussières, 2019-2020). We have found that university
students with disabilities have a higher DOL dropout
rate than other students (James, Swan, & Daston,
2016; Sauvé, Racette, Bégin, & Mendoza, 2016).
CSEDU 2021 - 13th International Conference on Computer Supported Education
468
Diploma Obtained Before Studying via DOL. The
level of education attained before enrolling in DOL
studies and past higher education experience are
factors that
influence dropout (Yoo, & Huang, 2013).
Fortin, Sauvé, Viger, and Landry (2016) indicate that
distance education students are more likely to drop
out if they have previous university education.
3.3 Environmental Conditions
Conditions in a student’s life have more influence in
DOL than in face-to-face learning, since students
enrolled in DOL are often older, have to balance a
busy schedule that includes work
and family
commitments, and are more often isolated from their
peers and instructors (Park, & Choi, 2009).
Four of these factors are generally examined in
DOL in relation to dropping out of post-secondary
education: (1) family support (Dussarps, 2015;
Kaddouri, De Villiers, Barbier, & Bourgeois, 2006);
(2) support from friends (Dussarps, 2015); (3) the
burden of work (Loisier, 2013; Moore, & Greenland,
2017; Shah, & Cheng, 2019); and (4) financial issues
(Fortin et al., 2016; Vogel et al., 2018).
The results of these studies indicate that the more
a student feels supported by those close to him or her,
the less he or she will be tempted to drop out. As for
employment and hours worked, these variables are
part of a multifactorial phenomenon and are not the
sole cause of dropping out (Sauvé et al., 2015).
3.4 Learning Strategies
Various studies point out that self-regulatory learning
strategies are more important in distance and online
learning than in face-to-face courses, since DOL
students face many challenges not experienced when
they are physically present on campus. For example,
they must learn to manage conditions such as
asynchronous classes, written rather than verbal
discussions, and isolation from other students and
instructors, mastering new strategies and skills that
are appropriate to their virtual learning environment
(Wan, Compeau, & Haggerty, 2012). Students who
use the weakest learning strategies are most at risk of
dropping out of school (Kizilcec, Perez-Sanagustin,
& Maldonado, 2017).
Self-regulation is a key concept that refers to the
process by which the learner activates and supports
cognition, affects, and behaviors that are oriented
toward the achievement of learning goals (Schunk &
Zimmerman, 2012). For example, managing
resources such as time, the study environment, effort,
help-seeking, and peer learning, plays a particularly
important role in student retention (Mottet, & Rouissi,
2013).
Based on Zimmerman's (2000) cyclical model of
self-regulation, which is the most widely used one in
studies of post-secondary DOL, we group 56 learning
strategies into three phases: planning,
performance,
and reflection. These strategies have been identified
in the
literature as potentially influencing student
persistence (Sauvé et al., 2020). For example, a
student who is not confident in his or her ability to use
effective study strategies, who feels unable to do well
on exams and assignments, or feels unable to meet
deadlines for the submission of assignments, will be
more likely to drop out of school.
3.5 Pedagogical Organization
Following Allen and Seaman (2017, p. 41), we define
DOL as "teaching that uses one or more technologies
to deliver instruction to students who are separated
from the instructor and to support regular and
substantial interaction between students and the
instructor in a synchronous or asynchronous manner.”
Studies on the impact of DOL pedagogical
organization on dropout rates are still rare and
inconsistent (Sauvé et al., 2020). In addition to not
precisely defining the types of pedagogical
organization studied, these projects are often case
studies or student satisfaction surveys (Deschryver, &
Lebrun, 2014). Moreover, they take little or no
account of possible differences in students' personal
characteristics (Loisier, 2013; Xu, & Jaggars, 2013).
To identify types of pedagogical organization in
the DOL courses under study, we examined the
instructional design that structures and organizes the
online learning environment, making available to the
learner and to the facilitator, tutor, or teacher the
technological and human resources necessary for
learning (Sauvé, 2019). This design is generally based
on a pedagogical scenario (Pernin, & Lejeune, 2004)
that varies according to the components made
available to the learner: technological tools,
pedagogical treatment (the educational approach as
well as formative and/ or summative evaluation),
navigational tools (contextual help, guides), study
tools (e.g., a path set out in modules or weekly
sessions), and supervision methods (e.g., types of
interactions and communication tools). We used these
components to build an analysis grid with the
objective of defining course models or archetypes for
comparative analyses.
Associations of Student Characteristics and Course Organization Factors with Dropping out of University Distance and Online Learning
469
4 METHODOLOGY
This exploratory study was carried out in the context
of distance and online undergraduate studies in the
province of Quebec, Canada. Quantitative data were
collected using: (1) a 25-item online questionnaire to
collect data on students' personal characteristics and
their perception of the course organization and
learning supervision offered in their DOL courses;
and (2) a course analysis grid to determine the course
models used in the DOL courses taken by
respondents. This grid made it possible to quantify the
technological tools, the pedagogical components of
the course, the learning activities in the course
sessions or modules, the navigation and learning aids,
and the courses’ learning support modes.
4.1 Sample
In order to establish our population, we selected
students enrolled in 19 DOL courses offered by a
francophone distance education institution in Quebec,
Canada. These courses were chosen based on three
criteria: (1) inclusion of at least three different
disciplinary fields (education, human sciences and
languages, and administrative sciences); (2) the
number of students per course (from 312 to 900
annual enrollments); and (3) the variability in the
course failure rates, ranging from 4.35% to 26.51%,
and dropout rates, varying between 4.3% and 26.35%
according to departmental data. A total of 3,578
students were solicited over four sessions of study in
2018 and 2019.
4.2 Research Questions and Analyses
Analyses were carried out to answer the following
questions: (1) Are socio-demographic, academic, and
environmental variables (family, finance, work)
associated with dropping out of a course and not re-
enrolling after two university sessions of an
undergraduate program? (2) Is the relationship
between socio-demographic and academic variables,
environmental conditions and the use of learning
strategies associated with dropping a course and not
re-enrolling after two university sessions of an
undergraduate program? (3) Is the relationship
between socio-demographic and academic variables,
environmental conditions, and modes of pedagogical
organization associated with course dropout and non-
re-enrolment after two sessions of undergraduate
university studies?
Various statistical models were used, depending
on their purpose in relation to the study questions.
All
analyses used an alpha of 5% (α =.05). Analysis were
carried out between categories in relation to the 25
socio-demographic, academic and environmental
variables in order to identify the variables that
influence drop-out. A two-step cluster analysis was
used to group the variables into categories that were
internally consistent, yet different from each other.
Analyses included independent samples t-tests and
univariate ANOVA for more than two groups. Chi-
square analyses was employed on variables for
learning strategies and course types. Post-hoc
analyses were also conducted with the Tukey test.
5 RESULTS
5.1 Description of the Study Sample
Of the 791 students who responded to the
questionnaire, 77.9% were female. Similarly, 46.1%
of respondents were 25-34
years old, 28.4% were
between 35-44 years old, 11.6% were over 45 years
old and 13.8% were under 25 years of age. In
addition, 71.2% lived in a couple (married or
common-law). French was the first language for the
vast majority (91.4%) of respondents.
Academically, 82.6% of respondents were
enrolled in part-time study, while 56.3% were
enrolled in a 30-credit certificate program. More than
half of the sample (54%) were in their first year of
university study. A total of 71.4% of students had
earned a post-secondary diploma or degree before
beginning their studies in DOL. Finally, 53.5% of the
respondents' mothers and 49% of their fathers had a
high school or vocational diploma, while 23.2% of
the students noted that their father had a university
degree, compared to 19.5% for their mother.
In terms of finances, 54.5% of respondents
reported working to pay for their education, while
22.3% reported financing their education through
loans and 18.3% through grants. Students rated their
financial situation as excellent (10.4%), good (38.7%)
or acceptable (43.4%).
Of the 791 respondents, 16.9% dropped out of
their course during the data collection semester, and
10% of these did not re-enroll after two study
sessions.
An analysis of the representativeness of the
sample, carried out on the 25 socio-demographic,
academic and environmental variables used,
confirmed that our sample was representative of the
student population except for two variables (gender
and study regime). These were found to be minor in
explaining students’ propensity to drop out.
CSEDU 2021 - 13th International Conference on Computer Supported Education
470
5.2 Students' Socio-demographic and
Academic Variables
Certain variables can be grouped into factors when
we attempt to explain the student's propensity to drop
out of a course. Seven factors account for 47.58% of
a student's propensity to drop out of a course.
Subsequent analyses were conducted on these seven
factors to examine their meaning. Three of the seven
factors indicate that a student is more likely to drop a
course if: 1) his or her first language is English and
he or she is enrolled in a short program; 2) he or she
is a common-law partner or lives with both parents;
and 3) his or her mother has no schooling, and the
father has a vocational diploma or the mother has only
completed elementary school and the father has no
schooling.
Similarly, an analysis was done to explain the
tendency of students to re-enrol or not after two
sessions. Seven factors explain up
to 66.75% of the
propensity of students to withdraw after two
consecutive sessions. Subsequent analyses were
conducted on these seven factors to examine their
meaning. Five of the seven variables indicate that a
student is at risk of not re-enrolling after two
semesters of study: 1) financing of the student’s
studies is based primarily on loans and grants or on
loans and working more than 21 hours per week;
2) parental education: a) the mother has a vocational
training diploma and the father has no schooling,
b) the mother has completed high school and the
father has an undergraduate university degree, or c)
the mother has no schooling and the father has
completed high school; 3) the student is a woman and
considers her financial situation "acceptable" or
"unacceptable"; 4) the student is a permanent resident
student with an undergraduate university degree
whose education is financed from personal savings;
5) the student's place of residence is located 31 to 45
minutes from the place of instruction.
5.3 Learning Strategies
By grouping learning strategies according to
Zimmerman's (2000) typology of self-regulation, a
single-factor ANOVA analysis identified differences
between certain student socio-demographic and
academic variables and the likelihood of using or not
using these same strategies. For foresight strategies,
only marital status was found to be statistically
significant. For performance strategies, family status,
gender, marital status, maternal education, distance,
parental funding of education, dyslexia, and physical
disability were found to be statistically significant.
For reflection strategies, marital status, language, and
financial judgment were found to be statistically
significant.
According to Student's t-tests, the scores obtained
in the three Zimmerman phases were not statistically
significantly and therefore did not affect course
dropout. However, in terms of non-re-enrolment, the
reflection phase makes a statistically significant
difference. In other words, the more strategies are
reported to be little used by students in the reflection
phase, the more likely they are not to re-enrol after
two consecutive sessions. For example, the more
dissatisfied students are with the quality of their
courses, their academic results, and their decision to
study at university, the more likely they are to drop
out.
5.4 Type of Pedagogical Organization
To identify course types in DOL, we used two-step
cluster analysis to interpret the data from the course
analysis grid. This method made it possible to move
from disparate courses to identify course models or
course archetypes that remain theoretical constructs.
Five course models (clusters) were characterized by a
set of 22 variables likely to influence student attrition,
such as activities for acquiring new knowledge,
carrying out learning exercises, and completing
summative evaluations. It is important to understand
that the 22 variables must be taken as a whole, rather
than individually, to characterize the course models.
The following is a simplified description of the course
models:
Course Model 1 - Moderately focused on reading
and practical exercises aimed at the acquisition
of knowledge, with some formative assessments.
Course Model 2 - Very much focused on
knowledge acquisition activities through visits to
external websites and formative evaluation
activities. More moderate on reading activities.
Course Model 3 - Very focused on knowledge
acquisition activities through reading and
practical exercises. Moderate on web site visiting
and formative evaluation activities.
Course Model 4 - Very focused on practical
exercises and formative evaluation activities
aimed at knowledge acquisition. Little reading.
Course Model 5 - Focused on both acquisition
and discovery activities through reading and
formative evaluation activities. Few practical
exercises.
By crossing the socio-demographic, academic and
environmental variables with the five course models,
Associations of Student Characteristics and Course Organization Factors with Dropping out of University Distance and Online Learning
471
we were able to make certain observations regarding
course dropouts.
For example, for a student in Course Model 2,
being single or living alone is associated with a
greater propensity to drop out of the course. In
contrast, being married/ having a common-law
partner or living with a spouse and children is
associated with a lower propensity to drop out of the
course.
Students who rate their financial situation as
"excellent" and "good" are less likely to drop out of a
Model 3 course. In contrast, students who rate their
financial situation as "acceptable" or" unacceptable"
are more likely to drop the course.
For Course Model 4, being single is associated
with a higher propensity to drop out of the course. In
contrast, being married, living with both parents, or
living with a spouse is associated with a lower
propensity to drop out of the course.
Finally, for Course Models 1 and 5, no variables
could be associated with dropping out of a course.
In short, the results of the study indicate that the
design of the course taken by itself does not affect
course dropout, unless it can be linked to students’
personal characteristics and appropriate interventions
to promote perseverance in their studies.
6 DISCUSSION
For our sample of 791 students, socio-demographic
variables largely explained their propensity to drop
out.
These results reiterate the conclusions of Xavier,
and Meneses (2020). Learning strategies did not
seem to be associated with dropping out of the course
but were associated with not re-enrolling. As in James
et al., (2016), analysis of learning strategies in
relation to socio-demographic, academic, and
environmental variables identified certain predictive
variables in the case of students who did not re-enrol
after two sessions of study: financing of studies,
parental education, financial situation, marital status,
and distance of residence from the educational
institution.
The distribution of variables related to online
course design is not random. In fact, the study
identified five types of courses with internally
consistent
and distinct distributions in terms of
instructional organization. The design of these five
course models, when taken out of context, cannot
explain the propensity of students to drop out of the
course, but it does contribute when we control for the
socio-demographic and academic variables of the
sample as outlined by Vogel et al. (2018). For
example, the study found that marital status and
family situation are two factors specific to the student
that are at risk of causing him or her to drop out of a
course, but only in courses that are close to the Type
2 and Type 4 models. In the other course models
(types 1, 3, and 5), these variables do not play a
significant role in explaining dropout.
7 CONCLUSIONS
A growing number of studies conclude that it is
difficult to identify predictive factors without a
holistic view of the problems and obstacles
encountered by those who drop out. It is in this
context that our study examined the interrelationship
of a multitude of factors that can influence dropping
out of a DOL course or not re-enrolling after two
study sessions.
Although this study has limitations, the results
provide an answer to our research questions, namely
that socio-demographic, academic, and
environmental factors that explain dropping out
cannot be analyzed in themselves but should be
considered in relation to learning strategies as well as
the pedagogical design of courses.
Finally, this
research focused on courses in the social and
administrative sciences. It would be interesting and
useful to do a similar study on students of technical
specializations.
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