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Does lecture attendance matter? The good, the bad and the ugly
Author(s) -
Elmarie Papageorgiou,
Pamela Townsend
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
south african journal of higher education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1753-5913
pISSN - 1011-3487
DOI - 10.20853/28-5-409
Subject(s) - attendance , salience (neuroscience) , certificate , psychology , higher education , mathematics education , medical education , accounting , political science , medicine , computer science , business , algorithm , law , cognitive psychology
This article reports on a study that investigated the impact of lecture attendance on the academic performance of first-year accounting students at a South African university. The objectives of this study were, firstly, to ascertain whether lecture attendance influences students' performance (measured in terms of their assessment scores) and, secondly, whether 'better' students (measured in terms of symbols obtained in English, Mathematics and Accounting in the South African National Senior Certificate (NSC)) believe that lecture attendance is important in order to attain better results. The research study used a mixed method design, which was both quantitative and experimental. The findings indicated three scenarios, which are reflected in the article as the good, the bad and the ugly, in terms of lecture attendance levels and academic performance. The value of the study resides in the insights gained about the salience of various lecture attendance trends in first-year accounting students.

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