This study examined trends in the practice of granting special consideration for missed tests and late papers in colleges and universities. We analyzed a database of 4,183 special consideration requests at a large Canadian university between 1998 and 2008. Results show a growing rate of requests per enrolment between 2001 and 2007. Although university officials and faculty are concerned that request making is excessive, an in-depth investigation of request making by the number of requests per student, request rate by course difficulty, grade point average, and illness-related work absences in the general population fails to support suspicions of dishonest behaviour. Furthermore, demographic variables—aside from part-time versus full-time student status, and to a lesser degree socio-economic status—do not distinguish students who made frequent requests from those who made few. We discuss potential explanations for the increase in requests for special consideration.
CITATION STYLE
Zimmermann, J., Kamenetsky, S. B., & Pongracic, S. (2015). Special Consideration in Post-Secondary Institutions: Trends at a Canadian University. Canadian Journal of Higher Education, 45(4), 261–282. https://doi.org/10.47678/cjhe.v45i4.184771
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