From Deseret News archives:

College students dropping out

Too few advisers and bottleneck courses may contribute to problem

Published: Monday, May 1, 2006 10:21 a.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
More colleges are gearing up for graduations this week, but roughly half of Utah's students may have been lost along the way.

Higher education leaders are worried that many students never reach the procession line because of bottleneck courses, too few advisers and an increasing amount of time required to finish a degree.

While the average length of stay for Utah's baccalaureate schools is just below five years, students at some schools, such as the University of Utah, are taking an average of 12 semesters — about six to seven years — to get their degrees.

The real concern for Utah Higher Education Commissioner Rich Kendell is that many students may give up on their degrees after getting bogged down in college. About half of all Utah students who enter college directly out of high school do not finish a bachelor's degree within six years or an associate's degree within three, according to the National Center for Public Policy and Higher Education.

"There's a possibility of people dropping out, looking at a program and saying, 'It's just going to take me too much time.' It's a little discouraging," Kendell said. "If you say, 'I'm one year short of a degree,' I'm not sure what that buys you."

Story continues below
Much of the challenge to finish a degree within four years, or ever, lies in bottleneck courses that keep many students waiting just to get into a program or a prerequisite course they need to graduate, Kendell said. High-demand programs such as engineering or nursing often have students biding their time while waiting to get into requisite classes.

At Salt Lake Community College, for example, slots for the nursing program are booked up until 2010 with students who have already been accepted into the program, Joyce Barra, nursing director, said earlier this year. Others, Barra said, are either on waiting lists of hundreds or have given up and are now trying to get into private schools.

Fifth-year U. senior John Poelman said most students accept that getting a bachelor's in four years is no longer the norm. Poelman will be graduating this year and served on a task force looking at why students are taking longer to finish school.

Often called "super seniors," many students stay on long after their fourth year is up trying to get into classes, changing majors or just trying to squeeze out every last college experience, Poelman said.

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

Image

Shavonne and Greg Updike defied odds by graduating from UVSC Friday. About half of students don't.

previousnext

Latest comments

Panel passes BCS playoff bill

Come on people, this is VERY easy to fix, make a stinking playoff to make it...

I guess the debate is over.

20 years ago: Jazz

Do you get tonight either and how players fall apart first sign of any...

250-300 people at costco today? Heck, I get more to my family reunion every...

How many of you have ever said I hate you to your brother during an arguement...

Dishonest global warming scientists

Radical Moderate | 6:16 p.m. You're obviously a "Radical" but hardly a...

when you consider that the team is mainly composed of freshmen & sophmores....

Nice job Marshall! Keep up the good work!

It's nice that so many fans turned out to get Palin's book. I just hope it...

Marshall Henderson really did play fantastic. Our team is young, but they are...

Advertisements