Tuesday 5 February 2008

First Results of Pre-Course Questionnaire

The course and module that this research is targeting started last week on Monday 28th January. By the end of last week there were a total of 682 students enrolled of whom 63 are retaking modules. The total includes students who completed a foundation module last autumn and 195 new students who were given exemption from the prelim study. These are all first year students and the total enrolment for all three years of the course is expected to be around 1275 students.

So far over 450 students from 38 nationalities have completed the pre-course questionnaire (over 90 were spoilt) representing 67% of target students taking year one. Two thirds are male and their employment ranges from trainees up to director level.

Responses indicate that the average working week is 37.2 hours with an average of 3.9 hours paid overtime. This gives an average working day of 8.2 hours and with an average daily commuting time of one hour gives a total weekday time commitment to work of 9.2 hours.

In respect of non-work time students indicate an average of 2.4 hours per day spent in domestic duties and 2.8 hours per day participating in social activity. Outside work most students spend between one and ten hours per week online engaged in activities such as emailing, banking, shopping, networking and general reference. Potentially this adds in a further 1.5 hours per day which increases to 2 hours if the average of 30 minutes per day spent on mobile phones is added in.

Overall the averages suggest that students already have 16.4 hours committed before sleep and study are taken into account. Adding in 8 hours sleep brings the daily average to 24.4 hours leaving zero time for study!

If these averages were accepted then the conclusion must be that students are cramming all their study into weekends. Clearly this is not the case and this highlights the fruitlessness of using average values to identify the time characteristics of the ‘average’ student.

A lot more analysis still needs to undertaken but one interesting outcome is the students’ weekly use of Facebook.

Over half the students use the social networking site with a clear pattern of increase from young to old for both genders - shown in this table.



If Facebook is a valid indicator of changing times then the conclusion may be drawn that the digital natives are indeed coming - and perhaps faster than first thought!

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