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"We speculate maybe these students are persisting and taking advantage of a lot of opportunities in college, when they might not have done that if their parents weren't prodding," Kuh said. However, those students do get lower grades. Barbara Hofer, a psychologist at Middlebury College in Vermont, said the results are similar to data she has gathered but not yet published on students at Middlebury and the University of Michigan. She also found helicopter parenting transcends race, class and education (though she prefers the term "electronic tether" to "helicopter parents"). Like the NSSE survey, Hofer has also discovered communication stays constant through college (about 13 times per week, by phone and electronically, for both freshmen and seniors), and that students who are more independent about academics had higher GPAs. However, it's unclear whether that's cause or effect: Does laissez-faire parenting produce smarter students, or do students who struggle academically draw in their parents for help? Among the other findings from the new NSSE survey: Ten percent of students say they never meet with their adviser, but 75 percent of freshmen rate their advising as good or excellent. Students are spending the same amount of time studying as they reported in 2001, about 13-14 hours per week. That's about half the time faculty say they should be studying. Students who are the first generation in their
family are much less likely than others to participate in learning experiences like study abroad or a faculty research project. ___ On the Net
[Associated Press;
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