Showing posts with label defining the term nontraditional student. Show all posts
Showing posts with label defining the term nontraditional student. Show all posts

Nontraditional students - - we are coming into our own. We CAN do it.

Photo by Morning theft on Flickr.



















I agree with this person. Yes, We CAN do it, nontraditional students.

We can go back to school.

We can feel good about ourselves doing it, and

We can help other nontraditional students too.

Yes, it's been a long haul, and sometimes some of us still feel un-included and alone. We wonder if we have done the right thing. We worry that if we go back again we will be in more debt. And that we won't find support at school OR in our families.

But I that attitudes are changing across the country. Older students are feeling more included, and more welcomed at trade school and at colleges. And their families are supporting them more.

On the horizon, I see a new wave of nontraditional student who are getting back into school in a big way, and realizing that they CAN make a better life for themselves and their families.

There is support out there for older students, who may be going back to school after a break. Some define nontraditional students more narrowly, as students over 24. Others realize that some students younger than this may have families, or may have taken a break from school.

Still others are older than most, maybe in their 50's and 60's, and may have always wanted to do something - - be it art, science, teaching, whatever... that they felt they would have been good at.

Some schools are doing things for this student population - - like providing opportunities for clubs, special study areas, lockers, get-togethers, and even babysitting services. Some allow nontrads to join National groups and even host meetings for ANTSHE and give awards, such as Pinnacle and Spire.

I think that's great.

What are things like for nontraditional students today? I went back over 5 years ago, and I took education classes. I tried teaching out, too (long story) and I'm writing a book about it too.

Let me know your experiences. Leave a comment!

Betsyanne

And here are more Nontraditional Student links: The Nontrad site and blog, Join Nontrads on Facebook, Nontrads on Yahoo, and Nontrads on Twitter 

Remember, Nontrads, We CAN do it! :-)

Defining ourselves as Nontraditional Students

Defining the Nontraditional Student (...what others may think, what I think, and what you think...)
This group could be Nontrads! Photo by Ed Schipul, Brian Potter and Sarah Worthy.
















OK - we know that nontraditional students are usually older, some have families, and many go part-time, online, or take a combination of all of these back-to-school classes.

Wikipedia defines a nontraditional students using the National Center for Education Statistics' definition.

They have seven separate characteristics of the nontraditional student:

"1. Delays enrollment (does not enter postsecondary education in the same calendar year that he or she finished high school)
  
2. Attends part time for at least part of the academic year  

3, Works full time (35 hours or more per week) while enrolled  

4. Is considered financially independent for purposes of determining eligibility for financial aid  

5. Has dependents other than a spouse (usually children, but sometimes others)  

6. Is a single parent (either not married or married but separated and has dependents)  

7. Does not have a high school diploma (completed high school with a GED or other high school completion certificate or did not finish high school)"

Some schools define a nontraditional student as being over 24. But I think a nontraditional student COULD be younger.




More of what I think: 
The nontraditional students I have met DO have a high school diploma, but I actually did not ask some of them about having a GED. I think a GED is just as valid as a "regular" diploma.

I also noticed that some of the nontraditional students I knew worked part-time or did not work also (referencing #3 above).

I also met people who were going to school full-time, which takes out #3.

My personal definition is "A person going back to school after a break." This gets to include GED students and students taking other higher education  classes. It's not JUST about college.

What do you think?

Leave a comment and start a conversation. See you next posting, and thanks for stopping by!


Betsyanne
Current and Former Nontraditional Student
Former: Education!
Current: Art from self-study, and finishing my books. (HOW could I forget that last time?)


Some Nontrad links: The Nontrad site and blog Join Nontrads on Facebook Nontrads on Yahoo Nontrads on Twitter 

Article links: The National Center for Education Statistics
Non-Traditional Students - on Wikipedia

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