| Literature DB >> 29375410 |
Krystle O'Leary1, Cheryll L Fitzpatrick1, Darcy Hallett1.
Abstract
Math anxiety has been defined as unpleasant feelings of tension and anxiety that hinder the ability to deal with numbers and math in a variety of situations. Although many studies have looked at situational and demographic factors associated with math anxiety, little research has looked at the self-reported experiences with math that are associated with math anxiety. The present study used a mixed-methods design and surveyed 131 undergraduate students about their experiences with math through elementary school, junior high, and high school, while also assessing math anxiety, general anxiety, and test anxiety. Some reported experiences (e.g., support in high school, giving students plenty of examples) were significantly related to the level of math anxiety, even after controlling for general and test anxiety, but many other factors originally thought to be related to math anxiety did not demonstrate a relation in this study. Overall, this study addresses a gap in the literature and provides some suggestive specifics of the kinds of past experiences that are related to math anxiety and those that are not.Entities:
Keywords: anxiety; educational psychology; math anxiety; math cognition; math experiences
Year: 2017 PMID: 29375410 PMCID: PMC5770635 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2017.02067
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Participants' Mean Scores and Standard Deviation on the Math Anxiety Rating Scale-Short Version (MARS-S), the Test Anxiety Inventory (TAI), Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI), and the Penn State Worry Questionnaire (PSWQ) (N = 129).
| MARS-S | 68.42 (18.82) | 0.166 (0.213) | −0.615 (0.423) |
| TAI | 43.68 (13.57) | 0.669 (0.213) | −0.124 (0.423) |
| PSWQ | 54.68 (14.16) | −0.343 (0.213) | −0.816 (0.423) |
| BAI | 17.25 (10.81) | 0.739 (0.214) | −0.109 (0.425) |
Correlations between Math Anxiety, Test Anxiety, and General Anxiety as measured by the Beck Anxiety Inventory and Penn state Worry Questionnaire (N = 129).
| Math anxiety | 1 | |||
| Test anxiety | 0.687 | 1 | – | |
| Beck anxiety inventory | 0.566 | 0.607 | 1 | – |
| Penn state worry questionnaire | 0.411 | 0.504 | 0.536 | 1 |
p < 0.01.
Correlations between Math Anxiety and Support, Instructional Methods, and Math Marks across the three levels of schooling (N = 129).
| Support Elementary School | −0.236 | −0.123 |
| Support Junior High School | −0.230 | −0.122 |
| Support High School | −0.269 | −0.317 |
| Instructional Methods Elementary School | −0.338 | −0.214 |
| Instructional Methods Junior High School | −0.267 | −0.167 |
| Instructional Methods High School | −0.248 | −0.270 |
| Math Marks Elementary School | −0.441 | −0.435 |
| Math Marks Junior High School | −0.515 | −0.424 |
| Math Marks High School | −0.475 | −0.430 |
p < 0.05.
p < 0.01.
Math Anxiety differences with responses provided by 10 or more participants on the Support Scale Open-ended Questions.
| No ( | 73.07 (16.09) | ||
| Yes ( | 67.79 (19.18) | −0.99(126) | 0.325 |
| Encouragement from a teacher ( | 62.47 (18.26) | −1.91(50) | 0.062 |
| Receiving extra help from a teacher ( | 73.93 (19.90) | 0.13(32) | 0.895 |
| Encouragement from a parent ( | 62.87 (23.96) | −1.39(32) | 0.175 |
| Receiving extra help from a parent ( | 69.67 (19.20) | −0.53(29) | 0.602 |
| Being asked to tutor others ( | 68.47 (20.41) | −0.67(27) | 0.508 |
| Being Involved in math enrichment ( | 61.78 (19.66) | −1.66(26) | 0.108 |
| Being involved in Math competitions ( | 56.33 (15.46) | −2.69(24) | 0.013 |
| No ( | 61.86 (18.40) | 3.54 (126) | 0.001 |
| Yes ( | 73.23 (17.37) | ||
| Having a math teacher who made them feel poorly about themselves ( | 77.60 (18.10) | 3.26 (69) | 0.002 |
| Lack of encouragement, praise, support, and help ( | 71.36 (20.78) | 1.52 (60) | 0.134 |
| No ( | 67.24 (12.07) | ||
| Yes ( | 68.22 (19.54) | 0.19 (124) | 0.850 |
| Parents' help ( | 56.83 (15.65) | −2.25 (42) | 0.030 |
| Parents' encouragement and praise ( | 64.34 (18.88) | 0.53 (35) | 0.603 |
| Having parents or family members that were good at math ( | 67.71 (21.38) | 0.08 (34) | 0.938 |
| Parents stressing importance of math and to do well ( | 70.75 (18.14) | 0.60 (25) | 0.552 |
| Parents stressing importance to do well in general ( | 64.10 (20.18) | 0.49 (23) | 0.630 |
Means, t-values, and p-value. Complete text of the open-ended questions can be found in Appendix B (Supplementary Material).
p < 0.01.
p < 0.01 after controlling for general and test anxiety.
Indicates the comparison group for all analyses within that question.
Math Anxiety differences with responses provided by 10 or more participants on Instructional Scale Open-ended Questions.
| No ( | 61.50 (16.19) | ||
| Yes ( | 71.70 (19.30) | 2.84 (121) | 0.005 |
| Having a teacher speak about how difficult math was ( | 61.71 (17.29) | 0.04 (50) | 0.967 |
| Having a math teacher who made them feel poorly about themselves ( | 82.08 (18.31) | 3.72 (48) | 0.001 |
| No ( | 66.81 (16.98) | ||
| Yes ( | 68.56 (19.47) | 0.44 (123) | 0.659 |
| Having a teacher who was available for extra help ( | 72.06 (19.60) | 1.12 (60) | 0.266 |
| Having a teacher who gave encouragement, either praise, support, or both ( | 71.34 (17.31) | 1.02 (57) | 0.314 |
| Having a teacher who explained and/or answered questions until they were understood ( | 60.10 (19.64) | 1.29 (48) | 0.205 |
| Teacher provided lots of examples/practice items ( | 52.36 (12.83) | 2.56 (39) | 0.015 |
Complete text of the open-ended questions can be found in Appendix B (Supplementary Material).
p < 0.01.
p < 0.01 after controlling for general and test anxiety.
Indicates the comparison group for all analyses within that question.
Math Anxiety differences with responses provided by 10 or more participants on Life Events Scale Open-ended Questions.
| Elementary School | |||
| No ( | 68.19(18.41) | ||
| Yes ( | 66.06(20.45) | 0.75 (126) | 0.457 |
| Junior High School | |||
| No ( | 66.89(18.39) | ||
| Yes ( | 83.97(14.37) | 3.35(125) | 0.001 |
| Before Elementary School | |||
| No ( | 68.31(18.72) | ||
| Yes ( | 70.77(19.05) | 0.58 (125) | 0.564 |
| Prior to Elementary School | |||
| No ( | 68.13(19.70) | ||
| Yes ( | 69.58(15.20) | 0.34 (126) | 0.736 |
| Elementary School | |||
| No ( | 67.57(18.81) | ||
| Yes ( | 72.64 (19.17) | 1.13 (126) | 0.263 |
| Junior High School | |||
| No ( | 66.79(18.60) | ||
| Yes ( | 80.56(17.02) | −2.72 (126) | 0.007 |
| No ( | 67.05(18.58) | ||
| Yes ( | 71.78(19.69) | 1.16 (124) | 0.249 |
| No ( | 73.66(16.89) | ||
| Yes ( | 66.19(19.57) | 2.03 (115) | 0.044 |
| Good math teachers ( | 64.37(14.82) | 0.92 (118) | 0.359 |
| Doing well and/or being confident in their math ability ( | 57.88(14.78) | 2.35 (118) | 0.021 |
| Being asked to take part in competitions and/or clubs ( | 61.91(21.39) | 1.31 (118) | 0.194 |
| Doing poorly or lower than own expectations ( | 76.83(19.56) | 2.06 (118) | 0.042 |
| Bad math teachers ( | 74.48(21.00) | −1.22 (118) | 0.224 |
| Being nominated/receiving awards for math ( | 56.64(17.52) | 2.06 (118) | 0.042 |
| No ( | 68.22(19.26) | ||
| Yes ( | 67.68(17.10) | −0.12 (121) | 0.905 |
| Negative ( | 72.27(16.73) | 0.91 (121) | 0.365 |
| No ( | 65.19(18.52) | ||
| Yes ( | 72.16(18.99) | 2.07 (124) | 0.040 |
| A family member had experienced major physical health problems ( | 67.91(19.10) | 0.65 (96) | 0.520 |
| Personal mental health problems ( | 73.90(20.56) | 1.38 (79) | 0.173 |
| No ( | 67.59(18.99) | ||
| Yes ( | 73.62(15.24) | 1.21 (121) | 0.228 |
| No ( | 64.98(18.25) | ||
| Yes ( | 71.49(19.13) | 1.96 (125) | 0.052 |
| Mental health problems, either personal or familial ( | 79.00(17.13) | 2.46 (74) | 0.016 |
Complete text of the open-ended questions can be found in Appendix B (Supplementary Material).
p < 0.01.
p < 0.01 after controlling for general and test anxiety.
Indicates the comparison group for all analyses within that question.