An Empirical Study on the Learning Experiences and Outcomes of College Student Club Committee Members Using a Linear Hierarchical Regression Model
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- To understand the overview of the learning experiences and outcomes of college student club committee members.
- To explore the relevance of personal background variables and learning experiences to the learning outcomes of college student club committee members.
2. Materials and Methods
- Club learning outcomes; This is the dependent variable of this study, which is the data regarding knowledge integration and application, cognitive integration and critical thinking, intrinsic self-development, interpersonal interaction skills, social care, civic literacy, and practical skills totaled 32 questions.
- Club learning experience; This is the independent variable of this study, which is the data regarding organizational operation experience, activity organization experience, club involvement experience, experience attending training courses, and experience in participating in activities totaled 29 questions.
- Personal background variables; This is the independent variable of this study, which is the data regarding gender, school attribute, education system, department studied in, grade, club attribute, number of club committee members, years of experience as a committee member, duties as a committee member, pre-college club experience, average time spent in the club per week, and duties in activities totaled 12 questions.
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Analysis of Personal Background Variables
- Gender, school attributes, education system, department studied in, and grade level.
- 2.
- Club attribute, number of club committee members, length of time in the club, current position, pre-college club experience, average time spent in the club per week, and position experience in activities.
3.2. Analysis of the Research Subject’s Current Situation
- Club learning experience
- 2.
- Club learning outcomes
3.3. Relevance of the Club Learning Experience to the Club Respondents’ Learning Outcomes
- Relevance of different personal background variables to the learning experience
- The personal background variables of “school attribute”, “department studied in”, “grade”, “years of experience”, “club position”, and “average time spent in the club per week” were significantly associated with the “organizational operation experience”.
- The personal background variables of “school attribute”, “grade”, “club position”, and “average time spent in the club per week” were significantly associated with the “activity organization experience”.
- The personal background variables of “school attribute” and “department studied in” were significantly associated with the “club involvement experience”.
- The personal background variables of “school attribute”, “years of experience”, “club position”, and “average time spent in the club per week” were significantly associated with the “experience in attending training courses”.
- The personal background variables of “gender”, “school attribute”, “years of experience”, “club position”, and “average time spent in the club per week” were significantly associated with the “experience in participating in activities”.
- 2.
- Relevance of learning experience to learning outcomes of student club committee members
- The “organizational operation experience” was of low relevance to the club learning outcomes.
- The “activity organization experience” was moderately relevant to the club learning outcomes.
- Regarding the relevance of “club involvement experience” to the six factors of club learning outcomes, it was highly relevant to “knowledge integration and application” and “intrinsic self-development” and moderately relevant to “interpersonal interaction skills”, “cognitive integration and critical thinking”, “social care and civic literacy”, and “practical skills”.
- The “experience in attending training courses” was moderately relevant to the club learning outcomes.
- Regarding the relevance of “experience in participating in activities” to the six factors of club learning outcomes, it was moderately relevant to “knowledge integration and application”, “intrinsic self-development”, “interpersonal interaction skills”, “social care and civic literacy”, and “practical skills”, and was of low relevance to “cognitive integration and critical thinking”.
- 3.
- Linear hierarchical regression analysis of the personal background, learning experience, and learning outcomes
- Student club committee members in public schools were positively relevant to “knowledge integration and application”, “intrinsic self-development”, and “interpersonal interaction skills”, and negative for “social care and civic literacy”.
- Student club committee members were positively relevant to “intrinsic self-development”.
- Student club committee members studying at the School of Medicine were positively relevant to “intrinsic self-development”, “interpersonal interaction skills”, and “practical skills”.
- Student club committee members with more “years of experience” were positively relevant to “cognitive integration and critical thinking”.
- Student club committee members who are club leaders were negatively relevant to “knowledge integration and application”, “intrinsic self-development”, and “interpersonal interaction skills”.
- “Gender”, “grade”, “pre-college club experience”, and “average time spent in the club per week” of student club committee members had no significant impact on the self-assessment of their learning outcomes.
- Learning outcomes were most influenced by “club involvement experience”, followed by “activity organization experience”, “experience in attending training courses”, “organizational operation experience”, and “experience in participating in activities”. Learning experiences had a significant and positive impact on learning outcomes.
3.4. Discussion
- These results echo the engagement theory and the research of many scholars. Like Astin’s engagement theory emphasized that students’ learning outcomes were related to their own backgrounds [23,24]; Kuh’s view of learning engagement suggested that school experiences had a direct impact on learning outcomes [25,26]; And Astain study also argued that students who invested more time and effort in the learning process had higher satisfaction with their self-achievement and learning experiences [23]; the study of Terenzini and Pascaralla indicated that the more students participate in school clubs, the higher their cognitive maturity; and school experience was highly correlated with learning outcomes [16]. Liao concluded that individual demographic variables, such as gender, school district, grade level, club affiliation, club experience, participation frequency of club activities, club position, motivation, and social service experience, made a significant difference in learning outcomes [35]. Liu et al. showed that campus experience had a critical impact on learning outcomes [36].
- The results of the study on the various abilities showed that critical thinking skills were better for those who had been club leaders. These results echo the [16,23,37,38]. Rubin et al. showed that participation in clubs did improve interpersonal skills and that students who were club leaders had better interpersonal skills than those who were only club members [28]; Chang showed that university clubs had a positive effect on students’ learning by increasing self-confidence, broadening horizons and developing independent thinking skills, self-understanding and growth in club activities [39].
4. Conclusion and Recommendations
4.1. Conclusions
4.2. Recommendations
5. Limitations and Future Researches
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Factors | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Organizational Operation Experience | Club Involvement Experience | Experience Attending Training Courses | Activity Organization Experience | Experience Participating in Activities | |
explanatory variance (%) | 21.78 | 15.74 | 13.36 | 11.90 | 7.35 |
cumulative explanatory variance (%) | 21.78 | 37.52 | 50.88 | 62.78 | 70.13 |
Cronbach’s α coefficients | 0.95 | 0.92 | 0.91 | 0.87 | 0.77 |
Cronbach’s α | 0.96 |
Factors | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Intrinsic Self-Development | Interpersonal Interaction Skills | Social Care and Civic Literacy | Knowledge Integration and Application | Cognitive Integration and Critical Thinking | Practical Skills | |
explanatory variance (%) | 18.58 | 15.29 | 12.62 | 10.61 | 8.58 | 8.24 |
cumulative explanatory variance (%) | 18.58 | 33.87 | 46.49 | 57.10 | 65.68 | 73.92 |
Cronbach’s α coefficients | 0.95 | 0.92 | 0.92 | 0.93 | 0.87 | 0.90 |
Cronbach’s α | 0.97 |
Variables | Category | Amount | Percentage (%) |
---|---|---|---|
Gender | male | 899 | 51.1 |
Female | 862 | 48.9 | |
school attribute | public | 795 | 45.1 |
private | 966 | 54.9 | |
education system | General universities | 1092 | 62.0 |
Technical universities | 669 | 38.0 | |
Department | polytechnics | 459 | 26.1 |
Business, Management, and Law | 399 | 22.7 | |
Education | 25 | 1.4 | |
Arts and Humanities | 170 | 9.7 | |
Agricultural | 156 | 8.9 | |
Medicine and Pharmacy | 197 | 11.2 | |
Social Sciences | 82 | 4.7 | |
others | 273 | 15.5 | |
Grade | Freshman | 224 | 12.7 |
sophomore | 963 | 54.7 | |
junior | 365 | 20.7 | |
senior | 188 | 10.7 | |
University fifth grade and above | 21 | 1.2 |
Variables | Category | Amount | Percentage (%) |
---|---|---|---|
club attribute | self-governing clubs | 412 | 23.4 |
Service clubs | 311 | 17.7 | |
academic and arts clubs | 341 | 19.4 | |
recreational clubs | 302 | 17.1 | |
sports clubs | 153 | 8.7 | |
alumnus clubs | 169 | 9.6 | |
Others | 73 | 4.1 | |
number of club committee members | Less than 5 people | 265 | 15.0 |
6–10 people | 681 | 38.7 | |
More than 11 people | 815 | 46.3 | |
years of experience as a committee member | less than 1 year | 737 | 41.9 |
More than 1 year and less than 2 years | 772 | 43.8 | |
More than 2 years and less than 3 years | 194 | 11.0 | |
over 3 years | 58 | 3.3 | |
duties as a committee member | President | 587 | 33.3 |
vice president | 219 | 12.4 | |
Advisor / Secretary | 178 | 10.1 | |
Finance and Equipment Manager | 127 | 7.2 | |
activity manager | 130 | 7.4 | |
teaching manager | 47 | 2.7 | |
information manager | 41 | 2.3 | |
other | 432 | 24.5 | |
pre-college club experience | yes | 1281 | 72.7 |
No | 480 | 27.3 | |
average time spent in the club per week | less than 6 h | 503 | 28.6 |
6 h–less than 10 h | 586 | 33.3 | |
10 h–less than 15 h | 243 | 13.8 | |
15 h–less than 20 h | 106 | 6.0 | |
more than 20 h | 323 | 18.3 |
Club Learning Experiences | Club Learning Outcomes | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Knowledge Integration and Application | Intrinsic Self-Development | Interpersonal Interaction Skills | Cognitive Integration and Critical Thinking | Social Care and Civic Literacy | |
organizational operation experience | 0.634 * | 0.617 * | 0.568 * | 0.488 * | 0.376 * |
activity organization experience | 0.587 * | 0.624 * | 0.589 * | 0.550 * | 0.546 * |
club involvement experience | 0.709 * | 0.731 * | 0.658 * | 0.595 * | 0.477 * |
experience attending training courses | 0.602 * | 0.587 * | 0.571 * | 0.517 * | 0.480 * |
experience participating in activities | 0.467 * | 0.471 * | 0.445 * | 0.390 * | 0.428 * |
Variables | Significant Independent Variable (Regression Coefficient) | Explanatory |
---|---|---|
Organizational operation experience |
| 26.7% |
Activity organization experience |
| 13.4% |
Club involvement experience |
| 20.6% |
Experience attending training courses |
| 16.3% |
Experience participating in activities |
| 9.6% |
Knowledge integration and application |
| 59.3% |
Intrinsic self-development |
| 61.1% |
Interpersonal interaction skills |
| 52.2% |
Cognitive integration and critical thinking |
| 42.8% |
Social care and civic literacy |
| 39.6% |
Practical skills |
| 40.9% |
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Chen, M.-K.; Chien, H.-N.; Liu, R.-L. An Empirical Study on the Learning Experiences and Outcomes of College Student Club Committee Members Using a Linear Hierarchical Regression Model. Appl. Syst. Innov. 2023, 6, 23. https://doi.org/10.3390/asi6010023
Chen M-K, Chien H-N, Liu R-L. An Empirical Study on the Learning Experiences and Outcomes of College Student Club Committee Members Using a Linear Hierarchical Regression Model. Applied System Innovation. 2023; 6(1):23. https://doi.org/10.3390/asi6010023
Chicago/Turabian StyleChen, Ming-Kuo, Hsin-Nan Chien, and Ruo-Lan Liu. 2023. "An Empirical Study on the Learning Experiences and Outcomes of College Student Club Committee Members Using a Linear Hierarchical Regression Model" Applied System Innovation 6, no. 1: 23. https://doi.org/10.3390/asi6010023
APA StyleChen, M. -K., Chien, H. -N., & Liu, R. -L. (2023). An Empirical Study on the Learning Experiences and Outcomes of College Student Club Committee Members Using a Linear Hierarchical Regression Model. Applied System Innovation, 6(1), 23. https://doi.org/10.3390/asi6010023