Publication | Open Access
Mid-Career Adult Learners in an Online Doctoral Program and the Drivers of Their Academic Self-Regulation
18
Citations
32
References
2019
Year
Educational PsychologyPeer RelationshipEducationSocial SupportOnline Doctoral ProgramSocial SciencesAdult EducationCareer InterventionAdult LearningTheir Academic Self-regulationYouth Well-beingAcademic Self-regulation PersistsStudent SuccessCareer DevelopmentAdolescent LearningHigher EducationAcademic Self-regulationSecondary EducationSociologyInterpersonal RelationshipsLifelong LearningMid-career Adult LearnersProfessional DevelopmentSelf-regulated Learning
Adult professionals enroll in online graduate programs and rely on social support and on their ability to self-regulate to be successful. The literature on academic self-regulation among emerging adults (traditional college age) is ample, but we do not know how social support interacts with academic self-regulation among adult graduate students at mid-career, particularly among those students who are first generation college goers. This study addressed the following questions: (1) To what degree do parental education level and cohort progression predict academic self-regulation? and (2) What sources of social support – family, friends, loved one (significant other), and classmates – are predictive of academic self-regulation for adult students in an online doctoral program? Findings include evidence that the influence of parental educational level on academic self-regulation persists through midlife. Also, that perceived social support from family, friends, and peers predicts academic self-regulation. We conclude with implications for the design of online programs.
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