Introduction
- For my final project, I will be looking at three variables: age,
type of session attended, and site. Research question(s):
- Do college students at higher tuition universities utilize sessions,
such as “Shopping on a Budget” less than college students at lower
tuition universities? In other words, can students at higher tuition
schools be able to afford more of a variety of food and eat out
more?
- Do older college students utilize sessions, such as “Shopping on a
Budget”, “Planning Healthy Meals”, less than younger college students?
In other words, do older students already have a better ‘grasp’ of these
life skills compared to young students who may have not been taught
these certain skills?
- Note: Tuition consists of one semester from the 2021-2022 academic
school year. This includes fees and tuition combined for a full-time
undergraduate student. This does not include cost of living
on-campus/off-campus.
My hypotheses:
I predict that schools with higher tuition will have a lower
attendance for their shopping on a budget sessions compared to schools
with lower tuition.
I predict that younger adults (18-24), will attend the shopping
on a budget sessions more so than older adults.
Summary of each variable
Attendance of Sessions Per Campus
Campus
|
Attendance
|
Cal Poly San Luis Obispo
|
46
|
CSU Chico
|
316
|
CSU Dominguez Hills
|
55
|
CSU East Bay
|
89
|
CSU Long Beach
|
363
|
CSU Northridge
|
448
|
CSU San Bernardino
|
51
|
Fresno State
|
246
|
Sacramento State
|
83
|
NA
|
0
|
Attendance Rate by Type
Type of Session
|
Attendance
|
Build a Healthy Plate
|
463
|
Planning Healthy Meals
|
221
|
Rethink Your Drink
|
207
|
Shopping on a Budget
|
700
|
What’s on a Label?
|
59
|
NA
|
47
|
Age Range of Participants in Years
Age Range
|
Frequency
|
18-24 years
|
1427
|
25-34 years
|
197
|
35-44 years
|
52
|
45-59 years
|
14
|
60+ years
|
5
|
NA
|
2
|
First Hypothesis
I predict that schools with higher tuition will have a lower
attendance for their shopping on a budget sessions compared to schools
with lower tuition.
The following table shows the number of students that attended the
single sessions per campus, in order of highest tuition to lowest.
Cal Poly has a significantly higher tuition compared to the other
campuses and the lowest overall attendance rate for single sessions.
Besides CSU Chico, the other campuses with higher tuition have lower
attendance rates as well. The campuses with the lowest tuition have the
highest attendance rates (besides CSU East Bay).
I need to look at how many of each type of session each campus
held and include in order of tuition in my graph so it is easier to look
at.
Single Session Attendance by Campus
The following graph is looking at how many students attended each
session per campus.
- CSU Long Beach, CSU Northridge, CSU Chico, and Fresno state had the
highest attendance rate for all the single sessions offered, among all
campuses. Shopping on a Budget is the highest attendance rate among all
the campuses. CSUSB and Cal Poly had the lowest attendance rate for
every type of class. They may not offer single sessions as much as the
other campuses, so this may impact the attendance rate. I can try to see
how many of each session the campuses offered, maybe by looking at the
date it was offered.
Second Hypothesis
I predict that younger adults (18-24), will attend the
shopping on a budget sessions more so than older adults.
The following graph shows how many students in a certain age range
attended each type of session overall (not separated by campus).
- It seems as though shopping on a budget is the most popular session,
regardless of age. The second most popular is build a healthy plate. The
session “What’s on a Label?” seems to be the least popular among all age
groups. If we had more individuals that were 25 years old and up it
would give a more clear picture.
Notes
When was the class offered? In other words, how many times was
the class offered at that certain campus per year?
- Maybe I can figure this out by creating some sort of chart that
groups how many participants went to the same exact class date and same
session. Need to figure out how to do this and what type of chart is
appropriate.
group by campus (function: group_by), count by month
finalize first hypothesis
##
## 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12
## 6 25 40 64 18 1 18 3 62 39 45 1
##
## 0021 0022 1996 1998 2000 2020 2021 2022
## 5 6 1 1 1 76 167 65
Extension
- include race and ethnicity, student standing (extension if I have
time)
- Focus on CSUSB as an extension (hypothesis; and we can extend this
to all other campuses)