1 / 15

Social Life vs. Academics

Social Life vs. Academics. Kristine Balderston Literature and Society Dr. Sherry 9/29/10. Problem. College is about social life and academics How do college students create a balance?. Proposed Response to Problem. Summarizing studies of college culture:

dard
Télécharger la présentation

Social Life vs. Academics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Social Life vs. Academics Kristine Balderston Literature and Society Dr. Sherry 9/29/10

  2. Problem • College is about social life and academics • How do college students create a balance?

  3. Proposed Response to Problem • Summarizing studies of college culture: • My Freshman Year: What a Professor Learned by Becoming a Student by Rebekah Nathan (2005) • Coming of Age in New Jersey: College and American Culture by Michael Moffatt (1989) • Interpreting ethnographic data • Describing the culture of college life at Bloomsburg University

  4. Background Studies of College Culture • Who: • Rebekah Nathan and Michael Moffatt • What: • Performed ethnographic studies of their colleges by enrolling as students and living in the dorms • Why: • To create an understanding of college culture through ethnographic studies • Where: • Nathan: “AnyU”, Moffatt: Rutgers University • When: • Nathan: 2005, Moffatt 1989

  5. Background • Nathan: • Compared to students decades ago: • “Today’s public college students are both studying a little less and socializing less.” ₁ (Nathan, 2005, p. 33) • This means more students have jobs and are involved in clubs • Student’s social networks are important to college students • Many relationships are typically formed early in college or through a common activity • Student’s balance socializing and going to class and most multitasked • An example is watching TV while doing homework

  6. Background • Moffatt: • College is a combination of social life and academics • Students referred to extracurricular learning as “social learning” • 4 in 5 considered extracurricular learning more important₂ (Moffatt, 1989, p.58) • All but 10% considered extracurricular learning contributed to their maturation in college (Moffatt, 1989, p.58) • This means 90% of the students thought this type of learning allowed them to make real-life decisions and work through real-life problems • Many students consider social learning more important than academics

  7. What About Bloomsburg? • Do the students at Bloomsburg care more about social life or academics? • How do the students at Bloomsburg create a balance?

  8. Method • Interpret ethnographic data by: • Visiting dorm rooms • Surveying people about a typical day • Observing a public space on campus • Interviewing people “unlike you”

  9. Findings • Dorm Rooms: • Dorm rooms could show if the student was more social or academic such as by neat vs. messy or books vs. entertainment • The picture on the left shows a futon in a student’s room • The futon suggests the person is social and has an inviting room for friends and hallmates to come in and hangout • The student with the futon was more likely to have friends come over and therefore worked less on school work • The pictures on the desk suggest the person loves to be reminded of friends and family all the time • The student, even if they were alone in the room, was surrounded by pictures of their favorite people and places • The picture on the right shows another student’s room • The room is clean and organized and this suggests that it allows the student to focus academically • The students I observed who were focused and diligent with their school work had clean and organized rooms • The students who had messy rooms were distracted and unable to concentrate on their school work • There are also books on the bed showing the student was recently doing homework or studying • This suggests that academics is important and comes before their social life

  10. Findings • Surveying students: • Surveying students about a typical day could show more about how they spend their time and their balance between social life and academics • Student 1 (Left): • The first student I interviewed spent five hours hanging out with friends and only an hour and a half doing homework • The student spent more time hanging out with friends than on homework which suggests social life is more important to them • Student 2 (Right): • The second student I interviewed was in class for five and half hours, did homework for two and half hours, then worked for an hour and a half • This shows the student’s priorities are academics and work • Students do prioritize academics and others are required to spend time doing school work because their job takes up a good amount of time

  11. Tables Drinks Desserts Food Commons 10 11 2 5 2 Findings 7 4 2 2 4 3 6 4 • Observing a public space: • Observing a public space on campus could relate to identifying students who are more social or academic • I went to the Commons at lunch and observed a majority of students were eating with friends or roommates • There were some students sitting with one other person but no one was sitting along • This shows students enjoy eating with friends instead of eating by themselves • The biggest group of students at a table could suggest that they are more social • I found when it comes to eating lunch or dinner students, social or academic, enjoying making time to eat with friends

  12. Findings • Interviewing people “unlike you”: • Interviewing people who you think are “unlike you” allows you to learn about how they participate in college culture • I thought the two students I interviewed were only focused academically because they always read, went to class, and were working on school work • I found they were actually more social and made time to fit in their school work • I asked: What is your favorite thing about college? • Student 1: My favorite thing about college is learning more about myself, meeting new people, and the freedom • Student 2: My favorite thing about college is being away from family, freedom, independence, and clubs • Both student’s answers involved friends and meeting people instead of classes or academics • Also both students listed freedom • This suggests they enjoy the freedom college brings such as deciding how you personally balance social life and academics

  13. Conclusion • The culture at Bloomsburg is social life and academics • Students consider both important • Academics is important in earning good grades and a degree • Social life is important to create friendships, relationships, and networks • Some students attend just for the social life, others for academics, or for a balance of social life and academics • Nathan and Moffatt’s studies of college culture agree social networks and academics are equally important • The data shows the students who had jobs were more focused academically because they only had time to focus on school work • Students who formed relationships early were usually more into their social life to keep up their network of friends • Student who were able to multitask could focus both academically and make time for their social life

  14. Conclusion (cont.) • A student’s schedule can suggest how they would spend time on academics or social life • College is a chance to make new friends and create social networks while learning and earning a degree • Students need a healthy balance of social life and academics in order to get the most out of college • The data I collected suggests a majority of students at Bloomsburg create a balance

  15. References ₁Moffatt, M. (1989). Coming of Age in New Jersey: College and American Culture. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press. ₂Nathan, R. (2005). My Freshman Year: What a Professor Learned by Becoming a Student. New York: Penguin Group, Ltd.

More Related