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Article
Student Motives for Taking Online Courses in Educational Administration
Educational Research Quarterly
  • Theodore J. Kowalski, University of Dayton
  • David Alan Dolph
  • Ila Phillip Young, University of South Carolina - Columbia
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
9-1-2014
Abstract

This study was conducted with students enrolled in a master’s degree program in educational administration at a private research university that offered all required courses in both online and in-class formats. The purposes were to determine (a) the extent to which online courses were selected, (b) the level of importance students placed on four common motives for taking online courses, and (c) levels of association between the importance of values and two demographic variables (employment level and years of teaching experience). The extent to which students took online courses varied considerably. Convenience and flexibility were the most important motives and instructional preference was the least important motive. Although associations between each motive and the two demographic variables were small, the correlation coefficients for convenience and teaching experience and for flexibility and teaching experience were slightly higher than the others.

Inclusive pages
27-42
ISBN/ISSN
0196-5042
Document Version
Published Version
Comments

Article included in repository with the permission of the publisher. Users may print, download, or email articles for individual, non-commercial use only.

Permission documentation is on file.

Publisher
Educational Research Quarterly
Peer Reviewed
Yes
Citation Information
Theodore J. Kowalski, David Alan Dolph and Ila Phillip Young. "Student Motives for Taking Online Courses in Educational Administration" Educational Research Quarterly Vol. 38 Iss. 1 (2014)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/david_dolph/5/