Research: Online Courses Associated with Improved Retention, Access
        
        
        
        Online courses are associated with  higher retention and graduation rates, increased access and cost savings of as  much as 50 percent, according to a new study from Arizona  State University.
The research is built on case studies  from a half-dozen institutions "with a strong track  record of using digital learning to improve student outcomes,"  according to information released by ASU. In addition to ASU, the other schools  examined for the study include Georgia State  University, Houston Community College, Kentucky Community and Technical College System, Rio Salado Community College and University of Central Florida.
Key findings of the report include:
  - Among four institutions in the study that  offered face-to-face and online courses, three reported higher retention and  graduation rates for students who took at least come online courses;
- At Houston Community College (HCC), for  example, retention for first-time freshman was 9 to 10 percentage points higher  among students who took an online or blended course;
- HCC students who took at least some digital  courses were 17 percentage points more likely to graduate than those who only  took face-to-face courses;
- At the University  of Central Florida (UCF), students who took 41 to 60 percent of their courses  online finished earlier, in 3.9 years, on average, than students who took no  course online, with an average of 4.3 years needed to graduate;
- Student  performance as measured by grades was mixed, ranging from 3 percentage points  more likely to end with an A, B or C among those took online or blended courses  to 12 percentage points lower;
- Students at two-year  institutions, unlike four-year schools, were more likely to earn lower grades  for online or blended courses, though retention and graduation rates were still  often higher for those students;
- At the Kentucky  Community and Technical College System (KCTC), for example, students who took  at least some online courses were 18 percentage points more likely to persist  and 21 points more likely to graduate, though their grades were 8 to 9 points  lower, on average, than their peers who took only in-person courses;
- Adaptive  courseware correlated with smaller achievement gaps for minority students and  those who qualified for Pell Grants, with only 8 percent of minority students  earning a D, F or withdrawing from all sections of an adaptive introductory writing  course at Georgia State University (GSU), compared to 19 percent of minority  students in the same course but without adaptive courseware;
- Among those eligible  for Pell Grants the numbers were similarly skewed, at 7 percent and 21 percent,  respectively;
- Among the five  institutions studied that offered both online only and face-to-face courses, the  share of students receiving Pell Grants was at least 5 percentage points higher  among those who were fully online than those whose courses were fully  in-person; and
- Online  undergraduate students were, on average, six to eight years older than their  on-campus peers.
"We are now seeing how scaled digital learning environments circumnavigate barriers of time and space, decrease time to completion amidst a radical demographic shift and provide pathways for unprecedented program completion," said Lou Pugliese, who oversaw the study and serves as managing director and senior education fellow for EdPlus at ASU, in a prepared statement. "The maturity of digital technologies has given way to new design methods that now allow institutions to more effectively address the unique set of specific learner needs in order to sustain in their academic journey."
The full report is available at edplus.asu.edu. 
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Joshua Bolkan is contributing editor for Campus Technology, THE Journal and STEAM Universe. He can be reached at [email protected].