Leaving rates and reasons for leaving in an Engineering faculty in South Africa: A case study
Keywords:
drop out, engineering education, South Africa, student retention, academic monitoringAbstract
This paper describes a case study undertaken at the Faculty of Engineering of the University of KwaZulu-Natal to determine the leaving rates from the faculty both by a cohort analysis (over the existence of the university from 2005 to 2010) and by a 1-year population balance over the whole faculty in 2009. Students who had left the faculty who could have continued were identified from the population balance and interviewed to determine the common reasons for leaving. The cohort analysis showed that from 2005 through to 2008, the leaving rate from first-year cohorts was reduced year on year (from over 22% to below 14%). This reduction coincided with stabilisation of the faculty after a merger process and increased academic support. In 2009, however, an increase in the proportion of first-year students who left (to over 17%) was identified, which may be linked to the entry of students who had taken the new National Senior Certificate in South African high schools. The population balance over the year 2009 showed an academic exclusion rate of approximately 6% of the total undergraduate student body, and, more significantly, an academic leaving rate of about 14% of the total student body. The exclusion rate remained fairly static across three semesters whilst voluntary leavers increased over the same period. An analysis and interviews with a sample of the students who left showed that financial reasons played a significant role in these rates, with 49% of non-academically excluded students having financial difficulties, and that a significant proportion of students continue their studies at universities of technology. Although this is a case study within one institution, it is hoped that the findings can inform the current debate surrounding increasing throughput in Science and Engineering within the country.Downloads
Published
2012-03-07
Issue
Section
Research Articles
License
All articles are published under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence
Copyright is retained by the authors. Readers are welcome to reproduce, share and adapt the content without permission provided the source is attributed.
Disclaimer: The publisher and editors accept no responsibility for statements made by the authors
How to Cite
Pocock, J. (2012). Leaving rates and reasons for leaving in an Engineering faculty in South Africa: A case study. South African Journal of Science, 108(3/4), 8 pages. https://sajs.co.za/article/view/9890
Views
- Abstract 188
- PDF (509 KB) 89
- HTML 119
- EPUB 62
- XML 74
- Figure 1 0
- Figure 2 0
- Figure 3 0
- Figure 4 0
- Table 1 0
- Table 2 0
- Table 3 0
- Table 4 0
- Table 5 0