College Students Reveal Why They Skip Class In 140 Characters Or Less

INDIANAPOLIS, IN – Class120, a technology designed to help improve student success in higher education, teamed up with the social media analysis company Crimson Hexagon to find out why college students skip class.

“Early on in the process of creating Class120, I remember reading a quote from a professor alleging our college students are the only consumers that actually don't want what they've paid for,” says Joe Montgomery, chief marketing officer at Core Principle.

A recent study at Harvard University found 60 percent of students on average attended any given lecture, showing even at this prestigious institution many students are not asking for their money’s worth when it comes to class attendance. When Montgomery and the team at Core Principle began designing Class120, a smartphone-based system to monitor and improve college class attendance, they had to do more than develop patent-pending technology. They had to understand why college students pay for classes and then fail to attend.

“With the typical college student skipping up to an entire year's worth of classes at a traditional four-year university, no one should be surprised that 45 percent of students fail to earn a diploma within six years of entering college,” says Montgomery. “But solving a problem of this magnitude demands a better understanding of what motivates today's college students to skip class.”

An Unprecedented Look inside the Student Mind

Early in 2014, Core Principle partnered with Crimson Hexagon with the goal of providing parents and education professionals with greater insight into the causes of skipping class on American college campuses.

Using Crimson Hexagon's platform to evaluate and categorize tweets on Twitter from January 2010 to March 2014, the two companies were able to identify and analyze more than 3.1 million tweets sent by students on the topic of skipping class.

Among those tweets, only 13 percent were students patting themselves on the back for not skipping, while 87 percent were students admitting to skipping class. And among those who confessed to skipping, a full 40 percent provided a specific reason why.

This data — consisting of nearly 1.1 million tweets — provided Class120 with an unprecedented look into why students skip class, with five primary reasons becoming clear:

  • Hanging with Friends: 37 percent of the Twitter posts referenced skipping class to spend more time with their friends.
  • Too Tired: 32 percent of students tweeted that they were sleeping or too tired to go to class.
  • Recreation: 17 percent of students indicated a specific recreational event or activity that took precedence over attending class. There were a vast number of specific events mentioned, including sports, watching television and playing video games.
  • Studying: 11 percent of students mentioned being too busy with other school work to attend class.
  • Weather: three percent of students' posts cited the weather — whether too beautiful or too unpleasant — as the reason they skipped.

Studies show that class attendance is the number one predictor of grades in a college course, outranking time spent studying, studying skills, high school grades or standardized tests. Despite this clear connection, even the most optimistic academic studies find that nearly one in five U.S. college students are skipping on any given day — with absentee rates reaching up to 70 percent for some large classes at major state universities.

Core Principle has mapped classroom buildings for more than 3,000 American college and university campuses, which gives college parents the ability to responsibly monitor the class attendance of their sons and daughters. The Class120 app uses geofencing technology that only allows Class120 and parents to know if a student's smartphone was in a classroom or not. No other location data is shared by the student's device and Class120. Montgomery stated that protecting student privacy was a paramount concern for the company.

Class120 was featured in The Wall Street Journal article “Cracking Down on Skipping Class” (January 14, 2015) as a promising solution for students at risk of dropping out due to poor class attendance.

About Core Principle
Based in Indianapolis, IN and founded in 2013, Core Principle is a software-as-service company dedicated to improving student outcomes at colleges and universities throughout North America. Core Principle's flagship service, Class120, uses geolocation and other advanced technologies to monitor college class attendance and provide near real-time alerts. For more information, visit www.class120.com. Find us on Twitter @GetClass120.

About Crimson Hexagon
Crimson Hexagon is a leading provider of social media analysis software. Powered by patented technology and an in-house data library of more than 500 billion posts, Crimson Hexagon's ForSight™ platform helps hundreds of brands and agencies answer critical business questions through the insights derived from social data. Find us on Twitter @crimsonhexagon.

Featured

  • Tennant Company Launches Autonomous Floor Scrubber

    Cleaning equipment and solutions provider Tennant Company recently launched the new X6 ROVR, a mid-sized robotic scrubber designed for large commercial and light-industrial environments, according to a news release. The autonomous machine can clean up to 75,000 square feet peer cycle with minimal needs for manual assistance.

  • California District Starts Construction on New Robotics Facility

    The Fremont Union High School District (FUHSD) near Silicon Valley, Calif., recently announced that construction has begun on a new Robotics Facility on the campus of Cupertino High School, according to a news release. The 14,500-square-foot facility will serve students at high schools across the entire district, providing purpose-built spaces for student creativity and collaboration.

  • Florida Elementary School to Undergo $47M Reconstruction

    The School District of Osceola County in Kissimmee, Fla., recently announced a partnership with construction firm Skanska to reconstruct Reedy Creek Elementary School, according to a news release. The $47-million project will involve the new construction of a 96,000-square-foot academic center, renovating the remaining facilities, a full-site redevelopment, and demolishing portions of the existing school.

  • Designing a Performing Arts Center from a PE Perspective

    Designing a top-tier performing arts facility for a high school is a complex endeavor that demands a delicate balance between advanced technical specifications and practical budget considerations. Nevertheless, it represents a crucial initiative that enriches educational and community engagements.

Digital Edition