Thursday, December 17, 2015

Research Blog 10

My Abstract:

College students are continually striving to see more and more job opportunities. Since the 80's more students are striving to have a job, and currently most students in college have jobs. However, working in college isn't beneficial. Lots of students who work part-time and part-time students have trouble paying for college, and find it difficult to do well in school. Students who lack the don't have the correct  mental approach to their work will not do well. Student's who were able to relate their work experiences to their academic learning would end up receiving higher academic achievements. Moreover, colleges and occupations only provided limited funding and it often comes with repercussions at the expense of the student. In terms of academics, students are more likely to dropout and not finish college over a six year period if they work part-time. In addition, students who work 20hrs+ (at least 70% of the student workers) or 10hrs and less, tend to have lower GPA's. Work provides students with an unnecessary distraction preventing them from preforming at the best of their ability, while simultaneously doing very little to actually help working student.

Works Cited

Bousquet, Marc. “Students Are Already Workers.” How the University Works:
Higher Education in the Low-Wage Nation. New York: NYU Press, 2008. 125-156. Print.

Dundes, L. and Marx, J. “Balancing Work and Academics in College: Why do
Students Working 10-19 Hours Per Week Excel?” Journal of College Student Retention, 8(1) (2006): 107-120

Hammond, Shawn. “Effects of Employment on Student Academic Success.”
 BYU Employment Services. (2006): 1-4. Print and Web.

Ibrahim, Norhayati. “Exploring the impact of Work Experience on Part-time
Student’s Academic Success in Malaysian Polytechnics.” Career and Technical Education Research 37 (2012): 52-74. Print and Web.

Kingkade, Tyler. “Most College Students Work Part-Time Jobs, But Few Pay Their
Way Through School: Poll.” The Huffington Post. (2013): n.pag. Web. 07 August 2013.

Nonis, Sarath A. Hudson, Gail I. “Academic Performance of College Students:
 Influence Time Spent Studying and Working.”  Journal of Education for Business. (2006), Vol.81 issue 3, 51-56. Print and Web.

Orszag, Jonathan et al. “Learning and Earning: Working in College.”
http://www.brockport.edu/career01/upromise.htm. Commissioned by Upromise. (2001). Web

O’Sullivan, Rory. Setzer, Reid. “A Federal Work Study Reform Agenda to Better Serve
Low-Income Students.” Young Invincibles. (2014): 2-14. Print and Web.

Pike, Gary R et al.  “First-Year Student’s Employment, Engagement, and Academic
 Achievement: Untangling the Relationship between Work and Grades.” NASPA Journal 45.2 (2008): 560-582. Proquest. Web. 03 March 2014. 

Ripley, Amanda. “How to Graduate from Starbucks.” The Atlantic (May 2015): 60-72.
Print and Web

“Rutgers Student Employment Office.” Studentwork.rutgers.edu. Web. 2015.

Scott-Clayton, Judith. Minaya, Veronica. “Should Student Employment Be Subsidized?
 Conditional Counterfactuals and the Outcomes of Work-Study Participation.” A CAPSEE Working Paper (2014): 1-34. Print and Web.

“Student Approaches to Learning & Studying- John Biggs.” Webcortland.edu. Web.

Wang et al. “The effects of doing Part-Time jobs on College Student Academic
Performance in a Chinese Society.” Journal of Education and Work. (2010) 79-94. Web

Weissmann, Jordan. “America’s Awful College Dropout Rates, in Four Charts.”
Slate.com. Web. 19 November 2014.

“Work-Study Jobs.” Federal Student Aid. Studentaid.ed.gov. Web. 2015

s to do well.

  

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