The Educause Center for Applied Research surveyed 29,000 college freshmen, seniors and community college students for its “Study of Undergraduate Students and Information Technology 2006.” Of those interviewed:
98% own a PC (38% of freshmen start college with desktop and notebook PCs)
20% own a PDA, smart phone or both
61% own an electronic music or video device
23 hours per week is spent using various information and communication technology
The survey’s key observations:
- IT demands vary widely between younger and older students.
- Curriculum is important in the development of needed IT skills for students.
- IT in courses is about convenience and how it lets students balance their work, academic and personal lives.
- Many students want technology to supplement the classroom experience, not replace it.
Read the complete report at www.educause.edu/ecar.
E-Expectations: What High School Students Want From
College Web Sites
- Fill out financial-aid estimator forms
- Use tuition cost calculators
- Access admissions applications
- Request campus visits
- Instant message with admissions counselors
- RSVP for campus events
- Make inquiries
- Read profiles of faculty
- E-mail faculty members
- Read blogs by faculty members or current students
These are the findings of a 2006 survey of 1,000 Class of 2007 high school juniors conducted by Noel-Levitz, an education consultant in Iowa City, Iowa.

86% use it to reach prospective students
62% to reach alumni
fewer than
50% to reach other constituents
8% try innovative channels such as social networking sites, video-sharing Web sites and instant messaging
Source: “2006 Higher Ed E-marketing Survey” of 120 schools by IT analyst firm Media Logic of Bellevue, Wash.