Difference by age. Likely due to the fact that older students are more likely to be studying part time, results show that the older a student is, the less time they spend in classes and labs, dropping from 15.9 hours per week for those 20 and younger to 11.2 hours for those 30 and older. However, the time spent outside of class on academic work is virtually the same across age groups, indicating that older students are spending a greater ratio of time outside of class to in class than younger students.
Appears in 6 contracts
Samples: Agreement for Data Use, Agreement for Data Use, Agreement for Data Use
Difference by age. Likely due to the fact that older students are more likely to be studying part time, results show that the older a student is, the less time they spend in classes and labs, dropping from 15.9 15.5 hours per week for those 20 21 and younger to 11.2 11.3 hours for those 30 and older. However, the time spent outside of class on academic work is virtually the same across age groups, indicating that older students are spending a greater ratio of time outside of class to in class than younger students.
Appears in 3 contracts
Samples: Data Licensing & Membership Agreement, Data Licensing & Membership Agreement, Data Licensing & Membership Agreement
Difference by age. Likely due to the fact that older students are more likely to be studying part part- time, results show that the older a student is, the less time they spend in classes and labs, dropping from 15.9 hours per week for those 20 19 and younger to 11.2 12.0 hours for those 30 25 and older. However, the time spent outside of class on academic work is virtually the same across age groups, indicating ranging narrowly from 15.8 to 17.2 hours across groups. This indicates that older students are spending spend a greater ratio of time outside of out-of-class hours to in in-class hours than younger students.
Appears in 3 contracts
Samples: Data Licensing & Membership Agreement, Data Licensing & Membership Agreement, Data Licensing & Membership Agreement
Difference by age. Likely due to the fact that older students are more likely to be studying part part- time, results show that the older a student is, the less time they spend in classes and labs, dropping from 15.9 16.5 hours per week for those 20 and younger to 11.2 8.1 hours for those 30 and older. However, the time spent outside of class on academic work is virtually the same across age groups, indicating ranging narrowly from 15.5 to 17.1 hours across groups. This seems to indicate that older students are spending a greater ratio of time outside of class to in class than younger students.
Appears in 1 contract
Samples: Agreement for Data Use