| Literature DB >> 30417755 |
Sara A Wyse1, Paula A G Soneral1.
Abstract
Despite its value in higher education, academic rigor is a challenging construct to define for instructor and students alike. How do students perceive academic rigor in their biology course work? Using qualitative surveys, we asked students to identify "easy" or "hard" courses and define which aspects of these learning experiences contributed to their perceptions of academic rigor. The 100-level students defined hard courses primarily in affective terms, responding to stressors such as fast pacing, high workload, unclear relevance to their life or careers, and low faculty support. In contrast, 300-level students identified cognitive complexity as a contributor to course rigor, but course design elements-alignment between instruction and assessments, faculty support, active pedagogy-contributed to the ease of the learning process. Overwhelmingly, all students identified high faculty support, learner-centered course design, adequate prior knowledge, and active, well-scaffolded pedagogy as significant contributors to a course feeling easy. Active-learning courses in this study were identified as both easy and hard for the very reasons they are effective: they simultaneously challenge and support student learning. Implications for the design and instruction of rigorous active-learning college biology experiences are discussed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30417755 PMCID: PMC6755893 DOI: 10.1187/cbe.17-12-0278
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CBE Life Sci Educ ISSN: 1931-7913 Impact factor: 3.325
Descriptive statistics for introductory biology studentsa
| Course | Freshmen | Sophomores | Juniors | Seniors | Incoming GPA | ACT score | % Male |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Introductory Biology 1 | 6 | 27 | 24 | 9 | 2.93 | 26.5 | 44 |
| Introductory Biology 2 | 37 | 50 | 37 | 26 | 3.40 | 26.2 | 40 |
aData include number of students at each class standing level (based on credit), incoming grade point average (GPA) and ACT scores, and the percent of the class identifying as male.
Descriptive statistics for upper-level biology studentsa
| Course | Seniors | Incoming GPA | ACT score | % Male |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Upper Level 1 | 19 | 3.54 | 28.68 | 63 |
| Upper Level 2 | 19 | 3.57 | 26.35 | 26 |
aData include number of students at each class standing level (based on credit), incoming GPA and ACT scores, and the percent of the class identifying as male.
FIGURE 1.Representative example of lesson design elements that promote academic rigor. (A) Scaffolding learning progression (criteria 4). Appropriate levels of challenge and support are achieved through a flipped-classroom structure, in which students engage in low-level Bloom’s pre-activities activities, then spend class time extending learning through higher-order group activities and models. TA, teaching assistant. (B) Representative example of summative assessment item meeting criteria 1–3. Learners engage in higher-order processing spanning biological scales using a cross-cutting concept of evolution through a meaningful case study.
Coding rubric for survey question 1: Please describe the hardest class you have ever taken (at college). What made it so rigorous?
| Category | Definition and examples |
|---|---|
| Low preparation and interest | Students do not have an interest in the concept/course or do not have adequate preparation for the course. |
| High workload | Course requires a lot of time, especially out of class (especially with other people), assignments, reading, and information. |
| Quick pace | Course has too much content covered too quickly for a student to process. |
| Unclear importance | Students struggle with determining what is important; there are lots of facts to be memorized; facts don’t seem to “fit” anywhere to students. Disorganized course structure makes it hard for students to follow. |
| Lack of alignment | Assessments do not match content or approach in the class. Most of the grade depends on one or two assessments. |
| Low faculty support | Faculty do not appear to help and support students; lots of learning being done on their own (independent learning); lack of active-learning approaches; students receive little feedback on assessments for improvement. |
| High cognitive demanda | Material/content is more complex and requires critical thinking, application, analysis, synthesis, and/or evaluation. |
aIf students specifically mentioned a hard assignment and referenced cognitive demand (e.g., critical thinking), then we coded the response as “HCD” (high cognitive demand); if not, then we did not code that mentioning, as we could not tell what was “difficult” or “hard” about the assignment or what “hard” meant in this context.
Coding rubric for survey question 2: Please describe the easiest class you have ever taken at college. What made it so easy?
| Category | Definition |
|---|---|
| Strong preparation and interest | Student has strengths in this content area, is interested in the course, and/or has prior course work/learning in this area that leaves the student feeling prepared for the course. |
| Low/manageable workload | Easy courses have low student workload expectations, or there are “reasonable” workload expectations (e.g., “not too many big projects”). |
| Course content is “logical” | Course material is “commonsense” or course content seems “logical” to students. |
| Clear alignment | Expectations for what is important are clear; class content and exams are well matched. |
| High support | Faculty help, listen, and provide support (e.g., peers) for studying; active-learning strategies are employed; feedback is provided. |
| Low cognitive demand | Material/content is fact based, requiring memorization or simple comprehension. Critical thinking and higher levels of Bloom’s taxonomy are absent. |
Coding rubric for survey question 3: Please describe whether this course (name) was easy or difficult for you. What made it that way?
| Definition | |
|---|---|
| High preparation and interest | Student has strengths in this content area, is interested in the course, and/or has prior course work/learning in this area that leaves the student feeling prepared for the course. |
| Low/manageable workload | Easy courses have low student workload expectations, or there are “reasonable” workload expectations (e.g., “not too many big projects”). |
| Course content is “logical” | Course material is “commonsense” or course content seems “logical” to students. |
| Clear alignment | Expectations for what is important are clear; class content and exams are well matched. |
| High support | Faculty help, listen, and provide support (e.g., peers) for studying. |
| Cognitive demand | Material/content is fact based, requiring memorization or simple comprehension. Critical thinking and higher levels of Bloom’s taxonomy are absent. |
| Low preparation and interest | Student does not have an interest in the concept/course or does not have adequate preparation for the course. |
| High workload | Course requires a lot of time, especially out of class (especially with other people), assignments, and reading. |
| Quick pace | Course has too much content covered too quickly for a student to process. |
| Unclear importance | Students struggle to determining what is important; there are lots of facts to be memorized and facts don’t seem to “fit” anywhere to students; disorganized course structure makes it hard for students to follow. |
| Lack of alignment | Assessments do not match with content or approach in the class; most of the grade depends on one or two assessments; students receive little feedback on assessments for improvement. |
| Low faculty support | Faculty do not appear to help and support students; lots of learning being done on their own (independent learning). |
| High cognitive demand | Material/content is more complex; requires critical thinking, application, analysis, synthesis, and/or evaluation. |
| Lack of preparation made it hard. | Prior knowledge in the content area, skill or needing to transfer information from other content areas |
| High cognitive load made it hard. | Material/content is more complex; requires critical thinking, application, analysis, synthesis, and/or evaluation. There is more math. |
| The approach made it easy. | Course incorporated peer groups, faculty support, structure/scaffolding, and/or review. |
Forced-choice survey questions
| Topic | Question stem | Question choices |
|---|---|---|
| Hard | Think about the hardest class you have ever taken in college. Which of the following contributed to it being so difficult? Select as many as apply. | My lack of prior preparation made the course difficult. I wasn’t interested in or motivated for the course. The course had too much work. The pace was too quick for me to keep up. It was hard for me to determine what was important. Tests/exams did not align with what was taught in the course. I had to do a lot of learning on my own. The instructor provided very little feedback on my course progress. The course material was really complex (e.g., required a lot of critical thinking). Other |
| Easy | Think about the easiest course you have ever taken in college. Which of the following contributed to it being so easy? Select as many responses as apply. | I was really interested in the course material. I had a strong background and was prepared for the course. The workload was manageable. The content was logical; it made sense. The way the content was presented made it easy to follow. The expectations were clear. The exams and other assessments matched what we learned and did in class. The instructor provided feedback, help, and support. The content was simple and did not require a lot of critical thinking. Other |
Coding rubric for survey question: Describe a course that you’ve taken where you felt you learned the most. Why did you learn so much?
| Category | Definition |
|---|---|
| Interest and utility | Students are personally interested in the content area or know it will be useful to them in the future; material is related to past or future |
| Workload | Workload is high. |
| Faculty support | Faculty support student learning; instructor is “excellent”; students offered “this faculty was…” statements. |
| Application | Students can see how material applied or mattered to “real life.” |
| Convergence of past learning experiences | Students can see disciplines coming together; e.g., combining “math & chem with Bio”; faith integration (students see concepts relating to and/or enhancing their personal faith); real-life application (content connects to a real-world case or context, job/career they are interested in); personhood (helps them develop their academic identity, e.g., science identity). |
| Volume | Amount of content, greater detail |
| High faculty expectation | Students perceived that faculty had high expectations. |
FIGURE 2.Student perceptions of what makes a college biology course hard. The 100-level students (black, n = 155) defined hard courses as those that have a high workload and low faculty support and seem to focus on disparate facts the students struggle to see as important. The 300-level students (gray, n = 39) recognized workload and preparation as key factors that make courses hard, but also noted that higher cognitive levels make courses harder. Overall response patterns differ for 100- and 300-level students (χ2 = 39.016, df = 6, p = 0.00000071).
FIGURE 3.Student perceptions of what makes a college biology course easy. The 100-level students (black, n = 155) defined easy courses as those that have a low or manageable workload, logical content, personal interest, and/or strong background preparation by the student, and high faculty support. The 300-level students (gray, n = 39) recognized easy courses as having logical content, a manageable workload, clear alignment, high faculty support, and, last, a low cognitive demand asked of them in the course.
FIGURE 4.Student self-reports from selected “choose from” response items of what makes a course hard or easy. The left side of the graph corresponds to hard attributes, and the right side of the graph corresponds to easy attributes. 100-level students (black, n = 90) identify lack of preparation and workload as reasons courses were hard. Both 100- and 300-level students acknowledge the required application of course content contributed to its difficulty. 300-level students (gray, n = 40) attributed courses as easy due to their background and the “ease“ of learning (I didn’t feel like I was learning).
FIGURE 5.Student perception of what makes “this” active-learning college biology course easy. The 100-level students (black bars, n = 41) defined the active-learning course as easy. The lowest contributor was the cognitive demand. The 300-level students (gray bars, n = 11) recognized the active-learning course as easy, indicating that it was easy because the content was logical, there was a high degree of learning support provided by faculty members, and it had a manageable workload and clear alignment.
FIGURE 6.Student perception of what makes “this” active-learning college biology course hard. The 100-level students (black bars, n = 45) defined the active-learning course as hard and subsequently characterized that difficulty as arising from the cognitive demand required of them in the course, the workload, and their lack of preparation for the course. The 300-level students (gray bars, n = 5) recognized the “active-learning course” as hard, with all students defining it as hard because of the high cognitive demand.
FIGURE 7.Comparison of 100- and 300-level student responses to courses wherein they learned the most. Bars represent frequencies of response. Both 100- and 300-level students identified faculty support as being key in a course in which they learned the most. In addition, courses in which they did not have a lot of initial knowledge but had high interest and saw strong practical application resulted in their perception of learning the most.
FIGURE 8.Progression of student perception of academic rigor. Student definitions showed a trend toward emphasizing cognitive complexity as an attribute of course rigor by the end of their college careers. Notably, academic stressors still remained a contributor to difficult courses; however, these upper-level students were also able to articulate that poor alignment between what was taught and assessed contributed to why a course was challenging.