Towards the point of return:Maximising students' uptake of university places following deferral and leave

Harvey, Andrew and Luckman, Michael and Gao, Yuan and Kubler, Matthias and Tomaszewski, Wojtek and Dempsey, Naomi and Devlin, Marcia and Cook, Elizabeth and Hill, Braden and Hill, Angela and Shore, Sue and Reedy, Alison and Holmes, Kathryn (2022) Towards the point of return:Maximising students' uptake of university places following deferral and leave. La Trobe University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.

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Abstract

Deferral and leave-taking behaviour substantially affects enrolment and retention rates across Australian universities. Almost ten per cent of commencing students defer their university offer every year, while over 20 per cent of continuing students take leave from their university within three years of commencing a Bachelor degree. Our research confirms that around one third of deferring students do not return to the university sector. Many more return to the sector but enrol in a different course or university from which they deferred. More worryingly, less than a third of continuing students who take leave subsequently return to study within the next two years. Universities have become more flexible in enabling students to leave, but arguably not as flexible and motivated to accommodate their return.

Item Type:
Book/Report/Proceedings
Subjects:
?? HIGHER EDUCATIONUNIVERSITYSTUDENT EXPERIENCEINTERMISSIONDEFERRALSWITHDRAWALABSENTEEISMGAP YEAR ??
ID Code:
172815
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
28 Nov 2022 11:30
Refereed?:
No
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
16 Sep 2023 03:30