Demographic factors and student preferences on the syllabus in the principles of accounting course.
Keller, Carl E., Jr. ; Marcis, John G. ; Deck, Alan B. 等
ABSTRACT
At one time, the course syllabus was a one-page document.
Today's typical college syllabus is a multiple-page document that
addresses a number of issues and contingencies. This paper presents the
results of a survey of 1,726 students from 31 universities in 19 states
regarding the course syllabus. The survey instrument was administered
during the spring 2002 term and contained 28 items that previous
research indicates are likely to appear on a course syllabus. The
primary purpose of this study is to assess the relative importance
students in the Principles of Accounting course place on different items
that frequently appear on a course syllabus. The results are analyzed by
the following demographic characteristics: gender, age, years of college
experience, and grade point average. The findings of the study indicate
that students do not attach the same amount of importance to all
syllabus components and that the level of perceived importance varies by
the demographic factors. Faculty members may use the findings of this
study to adjust their syllabi to improve communication to different
types of students.
INTRODUCTION
In recent years, groups as diverse as the American Association for
Higher Education, the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of
Teaching, state legislatures, business leaders, students, and parents
have called for improvements in higher education (Seldin 1990). Specific
calls to improve accounting education at colleges and universities have
been made by the Accounting Education Change Commission (AECC), the
American Accounting Association (AAA), the major accounting firms, and
many others (AAA, 1996; AECC, 1993; Albrecht & Sack, 2000; Kerr & Smith, 2003). The AECC identified five dimensions it considered
critical for effective teaching, and the Committee on Promoting and
Evaluating Effective Teaching reaffirmed the importance of the five
critical areas (AAA, 1996). The five dimensions are designing/developing
curriculums and courses, selecting and using appropriate material strong
presentation skills, using suitable pedagogical methods and assessment
devices, and providing guidance and advisement to students. Although
most accounting syllabi do not specifically address presentation skills,
they often reflect the design of the course, the selection of
appropriate material, the pedagogical methods and assessment devices
that will be used, and some guidance to the students on how to
successfully complete the course.
Furthermore, the instructor prepares the course syllabus for
several stakeholders: students, colleagues, administrators, and
accrediting agencies. Jervis and Hartley (2005) suggest that faculty may
use syllabi from other schools to aid in developing a course, and
several AAA sections support syllabi exchange websites. Faculty and
administrators often view the syllabus as a formal contract between the
instructor and students. Unfortunately, when a procedural difficulty
occurs in a course, the lack of information in the syllabus is often the
source of the problem. Consequently, the syllabus may be a major
consideration in student appeal proceedings (Parkes and Harris, 2002).
In addition, the syllabus is used in decisions regarding accreditation of educational institutions and programs. Perhaps the mixture of several
purposes and stakeholders has created a variance in the length of course
syllabi. Where the syllabus was once a one-page document, it has evolved
into a detailed course guide of several pages that addresses a number of
issues and contingencies (Garavalia et al., 1999).
A review of the literature also indicates some dissension on the
purposes/components that make up an "ideal" syllabus.
According to Matejka and Kurke (1994), an ideal course syllabus should
include the instructor's plan of action for the course, the
standard provisions for a contract between student and instructor, a
statement of the course's general purpose, the instructor's
orientation to the content and, finally, the information that should be
given to the customer (i.e., the student). While Parkes and Harris
(2002) agree that a syllabus should serve as a contract, they believe
the other purposes of a syllabus are to provide permanent documentation
for assessment and to provide information useful for student learning.
While controversial, the idea that the syllabus shall form the basis of
a contract is not surprising for instructors who believe that students
are indeed customers (Shelley,, 2005; Halbesleben et al., 2003). Those
teachers would be interested in research that determines what their
customers want and need in a syllabus.
However, individuals involved in higher education who do not accept
the viewpoint of students as customers may still find student opinions
are important for several pragmatic reasons (Zell, 2001). First,
students may use the syllabus to decide if they should continue their
enrollment in the class. For example, a student may decide his/her
schedule is overloaded if the syllabus communicates that several
time-consuming projects are required for the class. The student can
withdraw from the class and take the course in a later semester,
presumably when the student has more time available. Additionally,
professors who have enrollment-sensitive classes may need to know the
most important syllabus factors in the prospective student's
decision. Second, an instructor may find it prudent to know the critical
components of a course syllabus from a student's perspective, given
the relative weight of student evaluations in tenure, promotion, and pay
raise decisions. Course evaluation forms often ask the student to
respond to questions about the syllabus (e.g., "The instructor
provided a syllabus that clearly stated the course requirements").
Thus, an instructor's evaluation scores could be negatively
affected if the material considered most important to the student is not
included in their syllabus. Finally, as the course syllabus grows in
length, the students may struggle with information overload. In other
words, the increasing length of course syllabi may impede the student
from discerning the information he/she really needs to process,
particularly if the size of the syllabus discourages the student from
reading the entire document.
In any case, Altman (1999) suggests that syllabus goals can only be
achieved if the syllabus provides sufficient information. Yet,
sufficient information may not be the only problem facing the
instructor's syllabus. One would expect students to read and
remember only information they deem important. Even though an instructor
may believe that all of the information in the syllabus is of great
importance, it does not necessarily follow that the students will attach
the same weight to that information. Furthermore, students with similar
characteristics may have similar preferences on course design, teaching
and assessment methods, and administrative issues, all of which are
usually reflected in the course syllabus.
Therefore, this study assesses the relative importance that
students in the Principles of Accounting course place on items that
previous research indicates frequently appear on a course syllabus. Data
for the study were gathered with a one-page questionnaire. A national
"convenience sample" was conducted during the Spring 2002
term. The paper is organized in the following manner. The first section
provides a review of the available literature. The second section
discusses the design and the administration of the survey questionnaire.
The third section presents the study's results and the final
section discusses the overall conclusions from the study.
REVIEW OF THE LITERATURE
Although numerous articles from various disciplines discuss general
syllabus content, empirical studies of syllabus components are a
generally unexplored area. In a search of the literature, only three
empirical studies of syllabus components were identified. A study by
Smith and Razzouk (1993) gathered information from 152 students enrolled
in two upper-division marketing courses at a state-assisted university
in the southwest U.S. The purpose of the study was to "assess the
nature and degree of usage of course syllabi" (Smith and Razzouk,
1993, 218) by advanced undergraduate marketing students. The survey
instrument developed by Smith and Razzouk was composed primarily of
open-ended questions that were dependent upon a student's ability
to recall specific information from the course syllabus. Smith and
Razzouk were surprised at the inability of these advanced undergraduates
to recall relevant syllabus information such as course objectives and
evaluation procedures. Smith and Razzouk concluded it was necessary to
increase the effectiveness of the course syllabus "as a
communication vehicle in the classroom" (Smith and Razzouk 1993,
218).
Becker and Calhoon (1999) conducted a pre- and post-semester survey
of 863 and 509 undergraduate students, respectively, in various sections
of introductory psychology courses at four midwestern institutions. The
students were asked to view 29 items that are likely to appear on a
course syllabus and indicate (with a seven-point Likert scale) how much
they would attend to each of the 29 items. Of the 29 items, the four
that were "most important" to students were: "examination
and quiz dates," "due dates of assignments," the
"reading material covered by each exam or quiz," and the
"grading procedures and policies." The four items that were
the "least important" to the students were: the "titles
and authors of textbooks and readings," the "drop (withdrawal)
dates," "course information" (such as course number and
title, section number, credit hours), and the "academic dishonesty policy." Comparing "first semester students" to
"continuing students," Becker and Calhoon found continuing
students ranked items pertaining to the type of exams and assignments
higher than first-semester students. Comparing students of
"traditional age" with those of a "non-traditional
age," Becker and Calhoon found "continuing students rated
items pertaining to course goals, title, and author of textbooks, and
kind of assignments as more important than did traditional-age
students" (Becker and Calhoon, 1993, 9).
Garavalia et al. (1999) compared survey responses (using a
five-point Likert scale) of 242 students and 74 faculty at Valdosta
State University. The undergraduate students were enrolled in eight
sections of the university's introductory psychology course. The 74
faculty who participated in the study were solicited using a university
faculty listserv that contained 536 members. Both faculty and students
responded to a 39-item survey. The results of the study indicated that
students and faculty members differed in the amount of importance
assigned to 15 suggested syllabi components. Items students and faculty
disagreed upon include: "examples of completed
projects/papers," the "instructor's home phone
number," the "basic format of examinations," and the
"length of required projects/papers." Examples of items that
faculty members and students rated similarly in importance were: the
"instructor's e-mail address," the "grading scale
for final course grade," and "the syllabus should be adjusted
periodically throughout the semester."
RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
Accounting faculty at 50 colleges and universities were contacted
via e-mail early in the Spring 2002 term and asked to participate in a
study pertaining to the course syllabus. The contacted faculty members
were asked to administer a survey questionnaire to students enrolled in
an introductory accounting course. Some faculty stated they were
interested in the research concept but were not teaching an introductory
course in the spring term. Other faculty stated that institutional
policies or other reasons made them unable/unwilling to participate in
this study. Faculty at 31 institutions in 19 states agreed to administer
the survey questionnaire to students enrolled in the Principles of
Accounting course. Faculty who agreed to have their classes participate
in the study were mailed a package that contained a specified number of
student survey questionnaires and a pre paid, pre-addressed envelope in
which to return the completed student questionnaires. Each faculty
participant was asked to distribute the student questionnaires to
willing volunteers. The students answered the survey questions after
their class session.
The instructions at the top of the survey were: "The Syllabus
for a course is an 'agreement' between the instructor and the
students in a course. We are researching what factors students feel are
important to include in a Syllabus." The survey instrument
contained two sections. The first section contained 28 items that
frequently appear on a course syllabus. For the most part, the items
used in this study were also used in the study by Becker and Calhoon
(1999). A seven-point Likert scale was assigned to the student responses
(where "1" = "no attention at all" to "7"
= "great deal of attention"). Each item in this section had a
corresponding reference to a course syllabus component (e.g.,
"attendance policy," "examination and quiz dates,"
"late assignment policy," "course goals and
objectives," and "required prerequisite coursework to enroll
in the course").
The second section of the survey requested demographic data from
the individual student respondent. Specific questions pertained to the
respondent's gender, age, year in school, primary field of study,
and grade point average. Each faculty member who distributed the survey
also completed a questionnaire. The faculty responded to the 28 syllabus
items and provided data pertaining to institutional characteristics.
Specific questions inquired if the institution was either private or
state-assisted, if the school of business was accredited by the
Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business-International
(AACSB), the state in which the college/university was located, and the
approximate "full-time equivalent" (FTE) size of the student
body.
RESULTS
This study examines perceptions of syllabi items by different
student groups. Therefore, Panel A of Table 1 summarizes institutional
and student data for specific demographic characteristics. Students at
state-assisted institutions accounted for 71.4 percent (1,233 of 1,726)
of the respondents, although only 61.3 percent (19 of 31) of the
colleges and universities that administered the survey were public
institutions. While approximately one-third of U.S. colleges and
universities were accredited by the AACSB in 2002, almost 39 percent
(672 of 1,726) of the student respondents were at these institutions.
Although none of the responding colleges and universities had more than
20,000 full-time equivalent (FTE) enrollment, almost half (48.4 percent)
of the institutions had student enrollment between 1,000 and 4,999 FTE.
Panel B of Table 1 presents the self-reported data provided by the
student respondents. Of the 1,726 respondents, the number of males and
females were approximately equal, with 847 (49.1 percent) female
respondents, 864 (50 percent) male respondents, and 15 non-respondents
(to this question). The average age of the respondents was 21.63 years
and the students were, on average, taking 14.29 credit hours of classes.
Most students were in their second (44.8 percent) or third (31.6
percent) year of collegiate studies. Although a number of academic
majors were represented by the respondents, the four most frequent
majors were Management (18.4 percent), Accounting (16.6 percent),
General Business (15.6 percent), and Marketing (14.5 percent). The
average cumulative grade point average reported by the student
respondents was 3.0.
Table 2 reports the summary statistics (mean and standard
deviation) for each of the 28 survey items, listed in order from the
highest mean (most important item to appear on the syllabus) to the
lowest mean (least important to appear on the syllabus). Using a
seven-point Likert scale for the responses ("1" = "no
attention at all" to "7" = "great deal of
attention"), the five items with the largest numerical values were:
"Grading procedure and policies" (6.451), "Number of
examinations and quizzes" (6.262), "Examination and quiz
dates" (6.255), "Instructor information (for example, name,
title, office location, phone number, and e-mail address)" (6.126),
and the "Due dates of out-of-class assignments" (6.065). The
five items with the lowest numerical values were: "Academic
dishonesty policy" (4.691), "Title and authors of textbooks
and readings" (4.750), "Required prerequisite coursework
necessary to enroll in the course" (4.975), "Course
information (for example, course number and title, section number,
credit hours)" (4.992), and "Drop/withdrawal dates"
(5.051). These results indicate that students attach differing amounts
of importance to syllabus components. The extreme example is the amount
of importance students place upon "Grading procedure and
policies" as compared to "Academic dishonesty policy."
The difference in the mean scores between those two items is 1.76 =
(6.451 - 4.691). Thus, the score for "Grading procedure and
policies" increased by 37.52 percent over the score given to the
survey item titled "Academic dishonesty policy."
For Tables 3 through 6, tests were conducted to see if gender,
years in college, GPA, or the age of the students made a difference in
their responses to the syllabus components. In general, the sample data
for each of the 28 items exhibited some distribution tendencies of
skewness or kurtosis. However, if each group has more than 30 subjects,
a traditional ANOVA procedure is robust against moderate departures from
normality (Lehman et al., 2005). Also, a Levene's test for equal
cell variances was conducted for each of the 28 items in each of the
following analyses. The Levene's test results indicated that
unequal variances occurred (p < .05) for gender in nine of 28 cases,
two of 28 cases for GPA, eight of 28 cases for class rank, and 13 of 28
cases in the analysis of traditional and nontraditional students.
Therefore, a Welch ANOVA was selected as a conservative statistical
approach, as it allows for unequal group variances when testing for
differences in group means. If the Welch ANOVA indicated that a
significant difference (p < .05) between groups existed, then a
Games-Howell Pairwise Comparison test was used when more than two groups
existed in the means test. The Games-Howell test is a nonparametric multiple comparison procedure used to determine which of the groups are
different from one another. In addition, Tamhane's T2,
Dunnett's T3, and Dunnett's C nonparametric multiple
comparison procedures were conducted on the data and the parametric Tukey-Kramer HSD multiple comparison procedure was applied to the data.
All of the tests yielded approximately the same results provided by the
Games-Howell Pairwise Comparison test.
Table 3 indicates that significant differences (p < .05) exist
between male and female ratings of syllabus components on 11 of the 28
questions. Except for three items, ("Where to obtain materials for
class," "Amount of work," and "Course goals and
objectives") females rated the syllabus components as more
important than males. Thus, females appear to place more importance on
the communication of syllabus information. Both sexes rate "Grading
procedures and policies" as the most important item, and both sexes
provide the lowest mean for the item, "Academic dishonesty
policy." The most significant differences between the two
groups' responses were the items: "Instructor's office
hours," "Attendance policy," "Number of examinations
and quizzes," and "Instructor information (for example, name,
title, office location, phone number, e-mail address)." These
results suggest that females put more importance on instructor
information than males.
Table 4 reflects the effect of college experience on the importance
that students attach to syllabus components. Traditional class ranks of
freshman, sophomore, junior, and senior were designated as one, two,
three, or four years of experience, respectively. Students who reported
that they had attended university classes for more than four years were
placed into the same group, and designated to have at least five years
of college experience. The number of usable responses to the 28 items
ranged from 1,675 to 1,694. Panel A of Table 4 displays the Welch ANOVA
results. The ANOVA results indicate that significant differences (p <
.05) exist between the different class groups on nine of the 28 items.
Items displaying the most significant differences (p < .001) include
"Where to obtain materials for class (for example, texts, readings,
lab materials)" and "Academic dishonesty policy."
Panel B of Table 4 provides the results from the Games-Howell
Pairwise Comparison tests for each of the nine items. In general, the
group of students with at least five years of college experience was
never significantly different from the other groups. The senior group
(class year = 4) had the lowest mean scores on eight of the nine items.
The only item on which the senior group did not have the lowest mean
score was Item 10, the "Number of examinations and quizzes."
Item 10 was also the only item where the multiple comparison procedure
did not find a significant difference among the years, although the
Games-Howell Pairwise Comparison test almost showed a significant
difference between year three and year one (p-value = .054).
Specifically, the multiple comparison tests reveal that the most common
difference occurs between freshman and seniors. Although other class
groups also had significant differences with the seniors, Items 22, 26,
28, 18, and 27 typically found that students in their first year had the
highest mean response, and students in their fourth year provided the
lowest mean response. This result is logical for some items such as
"Where to obtain materials for class (for example, texts, readings,
lab materials)," and "Available support services (for example,
tutoring, computerized study guides)." Presumably, freshmen may be
unaware of how to access these resources, while the fourth-year student
may already know this information based upon experience. Also,
experience would explain why fourth-year students whose academic career
is almost finished assign less importance to items such as Item 19
("Required prerequisite coursework necessary to enroll in the
course") and Item 23 ("Course goals and objectives").
Seniors should be completing their academic program, thus one could
expect that they have researched these two items of information long
before they enrolled in the class. In contrast, sophomores and juniors
are just starting to satisfy core curriculum requirements, and they
usually are very concerned about this information.
Table 5 examines the differences in syllabus component ratings by
students with differing grade point averages (GPA). The student sample
was split into five groups. The first group self-reported a GPA of less
than 2.5. The GPAs of the second, third, and fourth group ranged from
2.5 to 2.99, 3.0 to 3.49, and 3.5 to 4.0, respectively. The fifth group
was composed of students who did not report their GPA, hence the group
was labeled as "Not Reported." Panel A of Table 5 summarizes
the results from the Welch ANOVA's on the 28 survey items. The
number of responses ranged from 1,705 to 1,726 for a given item.
Significant results at the 0.05 level are shown for five of the 28
items. Those five items were further analyzed using the Games-Howell
Pairwise Comparison procedure and the results of those tests are
displayed in Panel B of Table 5. The analysis failed to find any
significant difference between the groups for Item 23, "Course
goals and objectives," although the mean scores indicate students
with lower GPAs rated the item as more important than students with
higher GPAs. Items that impact success in a course or indicate the lack
of success showed differing responses based upon GPA. For example,
students with a lower GPA (e.g., 2.5 to 2.99) displayed more interest in
Item 28, "Available support services (for example, tutoring,
computerized study guides)," than students with a higher GPA (e.g.,
3.0 to 3.49). Furthermore, students with the lowest GPA ranked
information about drop/withdrawal dates, Item 27, as much more important
than students with the highest GPAs. However, the Welch ANOVA results in
Panel A show other items (e.g., Items 9, 11, and 12) that were related
to exam dates, exam times, or types of assignments that might be graded,
which did not display any significant differences among the groups. The
multiple comparison test of Item 3, "Course information (for
example, course number and title, section number, credit hours),"
suggests that students with a GPA of 2.5 to 2.99 believe that
information is more important than students with a GPA of 3.5 to 4.0. As
one would expect, students in the higher GPA groups rated Item 7,
"Grading procedure and policies," as more important than
students with lower GPAs, but the only groups that were significantly
different were the "3.5 to 4.0" group and the "Not
Reported" group. Overall, the results suggest that students attach
importance to specific syllabus components based upon their GPA.
Previous research (Becker and Calhoon, 1993) found differences in
students of a traditional age and those of a non-traditional age. Table
6 presents the Welch ANOVA results of traditional and non-traditional
students' responses to the syllabus survey instrument. Students
were placed into a traditional age group if their age was 23 or less,
and a non-traditional age group if their age was 24 or more. The results
demonstrate very few differences between the two groups. Significant
results (p < .05) were only achieved on four items. However, the
results are similar to Becker and Calhoon's findings in that
non-traditional students rated Items 23 and 15, "Course goals and
objectives," and "Title and authors of textbooks and
readings," significantly higher than traditional students. This
study's results were dissimilar to Becker and Calhoon's in
that Items 9 and 11 "Type of examinations and quizzes (for example,
multiple choice, essay)" and "Kind of assignments (for
example, readings, papers, presentations, projects)," were not
rated significantly different by the two types of students. An
interesting result was that traditional students rated Items 16 and 19,
"Whether extra credit can be earned" and "Required
prerequisite coursework necessary to enroll in the course,"
significantly more important than non-traditional students. Thus, the
results suggest that older students may be more interested in the
content of the course, but younger students have higher interest levels
on grade or curriculum issues.
DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION
As previously discussed, the syllabus has become a longer, more
comprehensive document of course content and policies. The content of
the syllabus is important for accreditation, resolving disputes between
instructors and students, and the administration of the course.
Furthermore, instructors use the course syllabus to communicate their
expectations of what students must do to be successful in their course.
Conversely, students make enrollment decisions and instructor
evaluations based, in part, on the contents of the syllabus. Therefore,
given the importance of the syllabus, one finds it surprising that only
three studies have empirically examined the course syllabus. This
study's primary purpose is to assess the relative importance that
different types of students enrolled in an introductory accounting class
place on items that frequently appear within a course syllabus. Faculty
members may use the findings of this study to reassess their syllabi and
perhaps include, emphasize, or provide more complete explanations of
those items that are of the greatest concern to their students.
The results of the study reveal the amount of importance that
students assign to different syllabus components varies greatly.
Furthermore, the study shows that different types of students assign
different levels of importance to syllabus components. Given that the
three highest-ranking items in Table 2 deal with exams and grades, one
can presume students would appreciate syllabi that fully explain and
highlight those items. A secondary area of importance that emerges from
the data is that an instructor's personal information and office
hours are very important to students. On the other hand, one may be
surprised to find that students do not consider information on the
academic dishonesty policy, the name of their textbook(s), or the
required prerequisites as important as holidays observed or the times
and location of class meetings.
This study extends previous research on syllabus components because
no other study has been conducted on syllabus components that used a
sample composed mainly of students from several business disciplines
enrolled in an accounting principles course. The only study conducted in
a business field tested the recall of syllabus elements and by
upper-level marketing students. Furthermore, this study extends prior
research by investigating different responses by students to syllabus
components by the factors of gender, years of college experience, grade
point average, and age. The study's results suggest that females
place more importance on the communication of syllabus information.
Also, females desire information on the instructor more so than males.
The results indicate the number of years that a student has been
enrolled in a university also affect their perceptions of the syllabus.
Specifically, students in their fourth year of college assign less
importance to information on obtaining class materials and
drop/withdrawal dates than freshmen. In addition, the fourth-year
student places less importance on other syllabus components such as: the
academic dishonesty policy, the required course prerequisites, the
available support services, and the late assignment policy. The data
analysis reveals that the GPA of a student may affect how much the
student desires certain information in a course syllabus. Students with
a low GPA are more interested in ascertaining the drop/withdrawal dates
and the availability of support services than are students with a high
GPA. Conversely, students with a high GPA rate information on grading
procedures and policies as more important than students with a low GPA.
These results may have implications for instructors who teach honors
classes or remedial classes to "at-risk" students. Finally,
some differences exist between traditional and nontraditional age
students. The results suggest that students of traditional college age
tend to focus more on grade and curriculum issues than nontraditional
students, but the older students rated items dealing with the content of
the course significantly higher than the younger students.
However, this study does not specifically address how an instructor
should incorporate these findings into their syllabus. Becker and
Calhoon (1999) suggest alternative strategies may be used to communicate
syllabus information. An instructor who wishes to satisfy student
interests can use the results from this study to place the highest-rated
components from their appropriate student groups on the first page of
the syllabus or to give the information a prominent display using word
processing features (e.g., boldface type, different font sizes, etc.).
An alternative strategy is to use the results to determine where student
interest is lower, but the instructor believes the information is highly
important. Then the instructor attempts to overcome the lack of interest
by making those syllabus items more prominent. A variant of this
approach would be to create special handouts of the items the instructor
considers the most important, or conversely, if the instructor feels
their syllabus creates information overload, to eliminate unnecessary
information and to use separate handouts for topics of lesser
importance.
A limitation of this study is survey response bias, which is
inherent in all survey research. However, the large sample size should
overcome most objections to this limitation. Furthermore, the
study's institutional response rate is 62 percent, as 31 of 50
schools agreed to participate in this study. Further research might look
for other factors that influence syllabi components. For example, how
much influence do accreditation agencies exert upon the syllabus? A
longitudinal study investigating changes in syllabi components over time
may be of interest to educators and administrators. Finally, a study
comparing faculty ratings to students' ratings on the importance of
particular syllabi items could lead to further insights that improve
communication and course administration.
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John G. Marcis, Coastal Carolina University
Alan B. Deck, Bellarmine University
Table 1: Institution and Respondent Demographic Data
Panel A: Institutional and Student Respondents
Institutions Students
Characteristic Number Percent Number Percent
Public (state-assisted) 19 61.3 1,233 71.4
Private 12 38.7 493 28.6
AACSB 10 32.3 672 38.9
Non-AACSB 21 67.7 1,054 61.1
Less than 1,000 FTE 1 3.2 19 1.1
1,000 - 4,999 FTE 15 48.4 834 48.3
5,000 - 9,999 FTE 10 32.3 551 31.9
10,000 - 20,000 FTE 5 16.1 322 18.6
More than 20,000 FTE 0 0 0 0
Panel B: Student Respondents
Characteristic Number Percent
Male 864 50.1
Female 847 49.1
Not Reported 15 0.9
First Year 169 9.8
Second Year 774 44.8
Third Year 546 31.6
Fourth Year 174 10.1
Fifth (or More) Year 31 1.8
Not Reported 32 1.9
Accounting 287 16.6
Economics 45 2.6
Finance 144 8.3
General Business 269 15.6
Information Systems 189 11.0
Management 318 18.4
Marketing 250 14.5
Other Business 45 2.6
Sciences 20 1.2
Humanities and Social Sciences 58 3.4
Journalism 8 0.5
Mathematics & Comp. Science 15 0.9
Education 3 0.2
Fine Arts 7 0.4
Other Major 25 1.4
Undecided/Undeclared 15 0.9
Not Reported 28 1.6
Characteristic Number Average
Age (in years) 1,677 21.63
Credit Hours Current Semester 1,691 14.29
Cumulative G.P.A. 1,508 3.00
Table 2: Syllabus Item Mean and Standard Deviation Results:
Ranked by Mean Score
10 Number of examinations and quizzes 6.262 1.098 1,719
12 Examination and quiz dates 6.255 1.293 1,720
6 Instructor information (i.e.; name, 6.126 1.226 1,725
title, office location, phone, e-mail)
17 Due dates of out-of-class assignments 6.065 1.427 1,719
25 Instructor's office hours 6.058 1.289 1,720
8 Attendance policy 6.045 1.360 1,719
11 Kind of assignments (i.e.; readings, 6.008 1.275 1,719
papers, presentations, projects)
9 Type of examinations and quizzes 5.981 1.339 1,722
(i.e.; multiple choice, essay)
13 Reading material covered by each 5.975 1.335 1,719
examination or quiz
2 Days, hours, and location of class 5.738 1.589 1,726
meetings
16 Whether extra credit can be earned 5.712 1.558 1,720
20 Dates and time of special events that 5.690 1.630 1,721
must be attended outside class
18 Late assignment policy 5.662 1.487 1,718
14 Schedule of topics to be covered 5.624 1.449 1,716
5 Course format (i.e.; lecture, 5.577 1.456 1,722
discussion, videos, classroom
activities)
1 Class participation requirements 5.457 1.522 1,725
4 Course description 5.438 1.578 1,712
21 Amount of work (i.e.; amount, number 5.322 1.598 1,721
& length of assignments)
23 Course goals and objectives 5.300 1.608 1,715
28 Available support services (i.e.; 5.272 1.720 1,705
tutoring, computerized study guides)
24 Holidays observed 5.213 1.822 1,720
22 Where to obtain materials for class 5.062 1.737 1,719
(i.e.; texts, readings, labs)
27 Drop/withdrawal dates 5.051 1.865 1,714
3 Course information (i.e.; course #, 4.992 1.824 1,725
title, section number, credit hours)
19 Required prerequisite coursework 4.975 1.884 1,712
necessary to enroll in the course
15 Title and authors of textbooks and 4.750 1.938 1,719
readings
26 Academic dishonesty policy 4.691 1.975 1,717
Table 3: Student Gender Analysis:
Welch ANOVA Results, Ranked by Absolute Difference between Means
Means Absolute
Diff.
Item Item Female Male between
Number Means
25 Instructor's office hours 6.1965 5.9233 0.2732
8 Attendance policy 6.1809 5.9149 0.2660
17 Due dates of out-of-class 6.1708 5.9582 0.2126
assignments
6 Instructor information (i.e.; 6.2326 6.0209 0.2117
name, title, office location,
phone number, e-mail address)
16 Whether extra credit can be 5.8197 5.6095 0.2102
earned
10 Number of examinations and 6.3586 6.1676 0.1910
quizzes
18 Late assignment policy 5.7547 5.5728 0.1819
20 Dates and time of special 5.7787 5.6074 0.1713
events that must be attended
outside of class
22 Where to obtain materials for 4.9775 5.1347 0.1572
class (i.e.; texts, readings,
lab materials)
11 Kind of assignments (i.e.; 6.0852 5.9313 0.1539
readings, papers,
presentations, projects)
7 Grading procedure and policies 6.5284 6.3766 0.1518
14 Schedule of topics to be 5.6956 5.5535 0.1421
covered
1 Class participation 5.5242 5.3893 0.1349
requirements
15 Title and authors of textbooks 4.8107 4.6834 0.1273
and readings
12 Examination and quiz dates 6.3147 6.1947 0.1200
26 Academic dishonesty policy 4.7476 4.6276 0.1200
28 Available support services 5.3293 5.2255 0.1038
(i.e.; tutoring, computerized
study guides)
13 Reading material covered by 6.0225 5.9302 0.0923
each examination or quiz
2 Days, hours, and location of 5.7792 5.6968 0.0824
class meetings
19 Required prerequisite 5.0095 4.9274 0.0821
coursework necessary to
enroll in the course
24 Holidays observed 5.2539 5.1798 0.0741
5 Course format (i.e.; lecture, 5.6107 5.5406 0.0701
discussion, videos, classroom
activities)
21 Amount of work (i.e.; amount 5.3001 5.3442 0.0441
of reading, number and length
of other assignments)
4 Course description 5.4618 5.4179 0.0439
9 Type of examinations and 5.9965 5.9594 0.0371
quizzes (i.e.; multiple
choice, essay)
23 Course goals and objectives 5.2889 5.3097 0.0208
27 Drop/withdrawal dates 5.0548 5.0418 0.0130
3 Course information (i.e.; 4.9965 4.9850 0.0115
course number and title,
section number, credit hours)
Item Item F ratio Prob > F
Number
25 Instructor's office hours 19.3602 <.0001
8 Attendance policy 16.4798 <.0001
17 Due dates of out-of-class 9.4894 0.0021
assignments
6 Instructor information (i.e.; 12.8107 0.0004
name, title, office location,
phone number, e-mail address)
16 Whether extra credit can be 7.7925 0.0053
earned
10 Number of examinations and 12.9764 0.0003
quizzes
18 Late assignment policy 6.4075 0.0115
20 Dates and time of special 4.7242 0.0299
events that must be attended
outside of class
22 Where to obtain materials for 3.4846 0.0621
class (i.e.; texts, readings,
lab materials)
11 Kind of assignments (i.e.; 6.224 0.0127
readings, papers,
presentations, projects)
7 Grading procedure and policies 10.4629 0.0012
14 Schedule of topics to be 4.1092 0.0428
covered
1 Class participation 3.3544 0.0672
requirements
15 Title and authors of textbooks 1.8313 0.1762
and readings
12 Examination and quiz dates 3.6547 0.0561
26 Academic dishonesty policy 1.5665 0.2109
28 Available support services 1.5393 0.2149
(i.e.; tutoring, computerized
study guides)
13 Reading material covered by 2.0428 0.1531
each examination or quiz
2 Days, hours, and location of 1.1514 0.2834
class meetings
19 Required prerequisite 0.8046 0.3698
coursework necessary to
enroll in the course
24 Holidays observed 0.7025 0.4021
5 Course format (i.e.; lecture, 0.9835 0.3215
discussion, videos, classroom
activities)
21 Amount of work (i.e.; amount 0.3221 0.5704
of reading, number and length
of other assignments)
4 Course description 0.3282 0.5668
9 Type of examinations and 0.3249 0.5687
quizzes (i.e.; multiple
choice, essay)
23 Course goals and objectives 0.0704 0.7908
27 Drop/withdrawal dates 0.0206 0.8859
3 Course information (i.e.; 0.0170 0.8963
course number and title,
section number, credit hours)
Table 4: Years of College Experience Analysis:
Panel A: Welch ANOVA Results, Ranked by F ratio
Item Item Total Degrees of
Number Observations Freedom
22 Where to obtain materials for 1687 4
class (i.e.; texts, readings,
lab materials)
26 Academic dishonesty policy 1685 4
19 Required prerequisite coursework 1680 4
necessary to enroll in the course
28 Available support services (i.e.; 1675 4
tutoring, computerized study
guides)
12 Examination and quiz dates 1689 4
18 Late assignment policy 1686 4
23 Course goals and objectives 1683 4
10 Number of examinations and 1687 4
quizzes
27 Drop/withdrawal dates 1684 4
4 Course description 1681 4
2 Days, hours, and location of 1694 4
class meetings
9 Type of examinations and quizzes 1690 4
(i.e.; multiple choice, essay)
16 Whether extra credit can be 1688 4
earned
13 Reading material covered by each 1687 4
examination or quiz
11 Kind of assignments (i.e.; 1687 4
readings, papers, presentations,
projects)
5 Course format (i.e.; lecture, 1691 4
discussion, videos, classroom
activities)
14 Schedule of topics to be covered 1684 4
17 Due dates of out-of-class 1687 4
assignments
1 Class participation requirements 1693 4
20 Dates and time of special events 1689 4
that must be attended outside of
class
3 Course information (i.e.; course 1693 4
number and title, section number,
credit hours)
21 Amount of work (i.e.; amount of 1689 4
reading, number and length of
other assignments)
25 Instructor's office hours 1688 4
15 Title and authors of textbooks 1687 4
and readings
24 Holidays observed 1688 4
7 Grading procedure and policies 1691 4
6 Instructor information (i.e.; 1693 4
name, title, office location,
phone number, e-mail address)
8 Attendance policy 1687 4
Item Item F ratio Prob > F
Number
22 Where to obtain materials for 7.8392 <.0001
class (i.e.; texts, readings,
lab materials)
26 Academic dishonesty policy 5.2700 0.0005
19 Required prerequisite coursework 4.8377 0.0010
necessary to enroll in the course
28 Available support services (i.e.; 4.5156 0.0017
tutoring, computerized study
guides)
12 Examination and quiz dates 3.9945 0.0039
18 Late assignment policy 3.3917 0.0105
23 Course goals and objectives 2.6417 0.0352
10 Number of examinations and 2.6129 0.0368
quizzes
27 Drop/withdrawal dates 2.5719 0.0393
4 Course description 2.3633 0.0547
2 Days, hours, and location of 2.3435 0.0564
class meetings
9 Type of examinations and quizzes 1.9090 0.1106
(i.e.; multiple choice, essay)
16 Whether extra credit can be 1.8266 0.1254
earned
13 Reading material covered by each 1.7438 0.1421
examination or quiz
11 Kind of assignments (i.e.; 1.6211 0.1707
readings, papers, presentations,
projects)
5 Course format (i.e.; lecture, 1.5199 0.1981
discussion, videos, classroom
activities)
14 Schedule of topics to be covered 1.4247 0.2274
17 Due dates of out-of-class 1.3682 0.2466
assignments
1 Class participation requirements 1.3201 0.2640
20 Dates and time of special events 1.2813 0.2788
that must be attended outside of
class
3 Course information (i.e.; course 1.2604 0.2872
number and title, section number,
credit hours)
21 Amount of work (i.e.; amount of 1.2587 0.2878
reading, number and length of
other assignments)
25 Instructor's office hours 1.1731 0.3242
15 Title and authors of textbooks 0.9266 0.4497
and readings
24 Holidays observed 0.9182 0.4545
7 Grading procedure and policies 0.8861 0.4734
6 Instructor information (i.e.; 0.5754 0.6808
name, title, office location,
phone number, e-mail address)
8 Attendance policy 0.5174 0.7231
Panel B: Results of Games-Howell Pairwise Multiple Comparison
Tests of Pairs for Items with Significant Welch ANOVA Results
(Alpha =.05 or less)
Class Number of Mean Standard Games-Howell
Year Observations Deviation Pairwise Comparison
Test Results *
Item 22
1 169 5.5740 1.4254 A
5 30 5.4667 1.3322 A B
3 546 5.0769 1.7404 B
2 769 5.0052 1.7552 B
4 173 4.6879 1.8695 B
Item 26
1 168 5.1191 1.8338 A
2 768 4.7122 1.9402 A
3 546 4.6960 1.9878 A
5 31 4.2581 2.3940 A B
4 172 4.1628 2.0823 B
Item 19
3 542 5.1365 1.8936 A
1 168 5.1190 1.8533 A
2 768 4.9583 1.8107 A
5 30 4.8000 1.7889 A B
4 172 4.3663 2.1136 B
Item 28
1 168 5.4286 1.6545 A
2 762 5.3504 1.6900 A
3 541 5.2717 1.7208 A
5 31 5.1290 1.7271 A B
4 173 4.7225 1.8719 B
Item 12
1 169 6.4556 1.0291 A
3 544 6.3640 1.1721 A
5 31 6.1935 1.2759 A B
2 771 6.1621 1.4081 B
4 174 6.1034 1.3688 A B
Item 18
1 169 5.8935 1.3231 A
3 541 5.7800 1.4278 A
5 31 5.6774 1.6204 A B
2 771 5.6174 1.4929 A B
4 174 5.3966 1.6157 B
Item 23
5 31 5.6129 1.4760 A B
1 169 5.4260 1.4907 A B
3 541 5.3715 1.5743 A
2 769 5.2705 1.6209 A B
4 173 4.9538 1.7581 B
Item 10
3 543 6.3757 1.0551 A
2 772 6.2358 1.1060 A
4 172 6.2093 1.0773 A
5 31 6.1613 1.0359 A
1 169 6.1006 1.1784 A
Item 17
1 168 5.3036 1.7260 A
2 769 5.0897 1.8473 A B
3 542 5.0480 1.9008 A B
5 31 4.7419 1.7883 A B
4 174 4.7011 1.9568 B
* Levels not connected by the same letter are significantly
different
Table 5: GPA Group Analysis
Panel A: Welch ANOVA Results, Ranked by F ratio
Item Item
Number
3 Course information (i.e.;, course number and
title, section number, credit hours)
28 Available support services (i.e.;, tutoring,
computerized study guides)
27 Drop/withdrawal dates
23 Course goals and objectives
7 Grading procedure and policies
19 Required prerequisite coursework necessary to
enroll in the course
2 Days, hours, and location of class meetings
22 Where to obtain materials for class (i.e.;, texts,
readings, lab materials)
4 Course description
21 Amount of work (i.e.;, amount of reading,
number and length of other assignments)
26 Academic dishonesty policy
16 Whether extra credit can be earned
10 Number of examinations and quizzes
15 Title and authors of textbooks and readings
18 Late assignment policy
20 Dates and time of special events that must be
attended outside of class
5 Course format (i.e.;, lecture, discussion, videos,
classroom activities)
1 Class participation requirements
14 Schedule of topics to be covered
11 Kind of assignments (i.e.;, readings, papers,
presentations, projects)
8 Attendance policy
25 Instructor's office hours
9 Type of examinations and quizzes (i.e.;, multiple
choice, essay)
12 Examination and quiz dates
6 Instructor information (i.e.;, name, title, office
location, phone number, e-mail address)
17 Due dates of out-of-class assignments
24 Holidays observed
13 Reading material covered by each examination
or quiz
Item Total Degrees of F ratio Prob > F
Number Observations Freedom
3 1725 4 3.4539 0.0083
28 1705 4 3.4386 0.0085
27 1714 4 2.9425 0.0198
23 1715 4 2.9092 0.0209
7 1722 4 2.7459 0.0275
19 1712 4 2.1635 0.0715
2 1726 4 2.0298 0.0885
22 1719 4 2.0171 0.0903
4 1712 4 1.9956 0.0934
21 1721 4 1.7715 0.1327
26 1717 4 1.7005 0.1480
16 1720 4 1.6756 0.1538
10 1719 4 1.5755 0.1790
15 1719 4 1.4756 0.2078
18 1718 4 1.2769 0.2775
20 1721 4 1.1207 0.3455
5 1722 4 1.0483 0.3813
1 1725 4 0.9734 0.4213
14 1716 4 0.9723 0.4219
11 1719 4 0.9333 0.4440
8 1719 4 0.9163 0.4538
25 1720 4 0.7866 0.5340
9 1722 4 0.6133 0.6531
12 1720 4 0.5911 0.6692
6 1725 4 0.5750 0.6808
17 1719 4 0.4031 0.8065
24 1720 4 0.3986 0.8097
13 1719 4 0.3955 0.8120
Panel B: Results of Games-Howell Pairwise Multiple Comparison Tests
of Pairs for Items with Significant Welch ANOVA Results (Alpha =.05
or less)
GPA Group Number of Mean Standard Games-Howell Pairwise
Observations Deviation Comparison Test
Results *
Item 3
2.5 to 2.99 471 5.2144 1.7512 A
Not Reported 217 5.0507 1.7956 A B
< 2.50 234 4.9615 1.9040 A B
3.0 to 3.49 483 4.9255 1.7998 A B
3.5 to 4.0 320 4.7469 1.8974 B
Item 28
< 2.50 232 5.4526 1.5947 A B
2.5 to 2.99 465 5.4194 1.7794 A
Not Reported 214 5.3551 1.6686 A B
3.5 to 4.0 317 5.1230 1.7413 A B
3.0 to 3.49 477 5.1006 1.7120 B
Item 27
< 2.50 233 5.3176 1.6847 A
2.5 to 2.99 469 5.1429 1.9422 A B
Not Reported 215 5.0512 1.8974 A B
3.0 to 3.49 481 4.9688 1.8419 A B
3.5 to 4.0 316 4.8418 1.8654 B
Item 23
Not Reported 218 5.4495 1.5745 A
2.5 to 2.99 467 5.424 1.5462 A
< 2.50 232 5.3922 1.6268 A
3.5 to 4.0 318 5.1635 1.7234 A
3.0 to 3.49 480 5.1563 1.5797 A
Item 7
3.5 to 4.0 319 6.5517 0.9161 A
3.0 to 3.49 482 6.4959 0.8414 A B
2.5 to 2.99 471 6.4544 1.0008 A B
< 2.50 232 6.3707 1.0322 A B
Not Reported 218 6.2798 1.1638 B
* Levels not connected by the same letter are significantly different
Table 6: Traditional/Nontraditional Student Analysis
Welch ANOVA Results, Ranked by Absolute Difference between Means
Item Item Mean
Number
Acred.
23 Course goals and objectives 5.5810
16 Whether extra credit can be earned 5.4546
15 Title and authors of textbooks and 4.9842
readings
19 Required prerequisite coursework 4.7331
necessary to enroll in the course
26 Academic dishonesty policy 4.4841
24 Holidays observed 5.0438
9 Type of examinations and quizzes (i.e.; 5.8110
multiple choice, essay)
27 Drop/withdrawal dates 4.8849
4 Course description 5.5857
17 Due dates of out-of-class assignments 5.9170
28 Available support services (i.e.; tutoring, 5.1355
computerized study guides)
3 Course information (i.e.; course number 4.8504
and title, section number, credit hours)
20 Dates and time of special events that must 5.5516
be attended outside of class
5 Course format (i.e.; lecture, discussion, 5.4643
videos, classroom activities)
14 Schedule of topics to be covered 5.7115
11 Kind of assignments (i.e.; readings, 6.0870
papers, presentations, projects)
21 Amount of work (i.e.; amount of reading, 5.2222
number and length of other assignments)
2 Days, hours, and location of class 5.6732
meetings
18 Late assignment policy 5.5929
22 Where to obtain materials for class (i.e.; 4.9842
texts, readings, lab materials)
8 Attendance policy 6.0000
12 Examination and quiz dates 6.1976
6 Instructor information (i.e.; name, title, 6.0827
office location, phone number, e-mail)
7 Grading procedure and policies 6.4229
25 Instructor's office hours 6.0717
13 Reading material covered by each 5.9802
examination or quiz
1 Class participation requirements 5.4606
10 Number of examinations and quizzes 6.2569
Item Mean Absolute F ratio Prob > F
Number Diff.
Non-Acred. between
Means
23 5.2406 0.3404 9.8364 0.0019
16 5.7497 0.2951 6.1928 0.0133
15 4.6923 0.2919 4.8106 0.0289
19 5.0064 0.2733 3.9648 0.0473
26 4.7027 0.2186 2.3535 0.1260
24 5.2423 0.1985 2.2928 0.1309
9 6.0014 0.1904 3.6334 0.0575
27 5.0644 0.1795 1.6853 0.1951
4 5.4122 0.1735 2.6217 0.1063
17 6.0783 0.1613 2.2371 0.1357
28 5.2919 0.1564 1.5188 0.2187
3 5.0063 0.1559 1.4950 0.2223
20 5.7037 0.1521 1.5958 0.2074
5 5.5904 0.1261 1.4506 0.2293
14 5.5962 0.1153 1.3689 0.2428
11 5.9824 0.1046 1.4464 0.2299
21 5.3247 0.1025 0.7603 0.3839
2 5.7533 0.0801 0.4468 0.5044
18 5.6688 0.0759 0.4701 0.4934
22 5.0599 0.0757 0.3527 0.5530
8 6.0642 0.0642 0.5299 0.4671
12 6.2616 0.0640 0.5086 0.4762
6 6.1294 0.0467 0.2699 0.6038
7 6.4532 0.0303 0.1817 0.6702
25 6.0556 0.0161 0.0315 0.8593
13 5.9661 0.0141 0.0211 0.8845
1 5.4536 0.0070 0.0044 0.9470
10 6.2609 0.0040 0.0027 0.9589