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Non-traditional (adult) business students and their perceptions of accounting in an introductory accounting course
[journal article]
Abstract This study examined non-traditional undergraduate student’s perception of accounting in an introductory
accounting course at five campuses of a Christian university in the southeast region of the U. S. The
consensuses of the student’s perceptions were positive over the perceptional items measured.... view more
This study examined non-traditional undergraduate student’s perception of accounting in an introductory
accounting course at five campuses of a Christian university in the southeast region of the U. S. The
consensuses of the student’s perceptions were positive over the perceptional items measured. However,
three of the items FORWARD(I am looking forward this course), DIFFICULT (This course will be difficult),
and INSTRUCTOR (The instructor will affect my opinion of the usefulness of this course) indicated a change
between the groups. In the pre-survey response, non-traditional students perceived FORWARD and
INSTRUCTOR higher than traditional students while both groups have an almost identical mean response
for DIFFICULT. However, at end of the semester (post-survey) traditional students now perceived both
FORWARD and INSTRUCTOR higher while non-traditional students now perceived the course to be more
difficult.
The findings in this study support the ideas and premise that non-traditional students are quite different
from traditional students, not just because of the obvious age differences but also because of the differences
in job, related experiences, and their needs as relate to educational institutions.... view less
Keywords
college; attitude; student; motivation; accounting; career planning; female student; business economics; United States of America
Classification
University Education
Method
empirical; quantitative empirical
Document language
English
Publication Year
2017
Page/Pages
p. 1-11
Journal
International Journal of Business and Applied Social Science, 3 (2017) 2
ISSN
2469-6501
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed
Licence
Deposit Licence - No Redistribution, No Modifications