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African American Males Learning Online: Promoting Academic Achievement in Higher Education

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Author(s)
Salvo, Susan G
Welch, Brett
Shelton, Kaye
Keywords
Distance Learning
distance learning, distance education, online learning, online education, African American students, black students, undergraduate students, male students, university students, best practices, contributing factors, academic achievement

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URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/72251
Online Access
https://olj.onlinelearningconsortium.org/index.php/olj/article/view/1390
Abstract
Online education is expanding within higher education. However, attrition rates for African American males enrolled in higher education in general, and in online courses specifically, is on the rise. Because the future of our nation depends on how well our educational institutions develop, nurture, and deploy talent, an investigation was conducted to identify factors that promoted online course completion among African American male undergraduate students. Ten males who successfully completed online courses were interviewed, and significant themes were identified. Factors that contributed to online course completion were financial assistance, prior academic achievement, previous information technology (IT) training, continuous academic enrollment, student selection of topics perceived as uncomplicated and less demanding or familiar due to sufficient prior knowledge, use of handheld digital devices, and a non-prejudicial learning environment. Based on these findings, recommendations are made that include strategies policymakers and educationists can implement to promote academic achievement and degree attainment among African American males in higher education.
Date
2019-03-01
Type
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Identifier
oai:ojs.ec2-52-6-73-98.compute-1.amazonaws.com:article/1390
https://olj.onlinelearningconsortium.org/index.php/olj/article/view/1390
10.24059/olj.v23i1.1390
Copyright/License
Copyright (c) 2019 Susan G Salvo
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Online Learning

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