| Literature DB >> 30631668 |
Jessica Ellis Hagman1, Estrella Johnson2, Bailey K Fosdick3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Calculus is a foundational course for STEM-intending students yet has been shown to dissuade students from pursuing STEM degrees. In this report, we examine factors related to students and instructors reporting a lack of time in class for students to understand difficult ideas and relate this to students' and instructors' perceptions of opportunities to learn using a hierarchical linear model. This work is part of the US national study on college calculus, which provides an ideal landscape to examine these questions on a large scale.Entities:
Keywords: Internal and external framing; Opportunities to learn; Pacing and coverage; Post secondary; Quantitative analysis, hierarchical linear modeling
Year: 2017 PMID: 30631668 PMCID: PMC6310462 DOI: 10.1186/s40594-017-0070-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J STEM Educ ISSN: 2196-7822
Factors and variables used in student and instructor analyses
| Factor | Student analysis | Instructor analysis |
|---|---|---|
| Traditionally marginalized or vulnerable populations | • Gender | • Gender |
| Classroom features | • Student reports of “student-centered practices” | • Common final |
| Student preparation and perception of student preparation | • Previous calculus experience (none, high school, college) | • Perceived student ability: “Approximately what percentage of students currently enrolled in your Calculus I course do you expect are academically prepared for the course?” (>80, 60–80, 40–60, or <40%) |
| What it means to “succeed” in calculus | • Success perception: “My success PRIMARILY relies on my ability to” (“solve specific kinds of problems” versus “make connections & form logical arguments”) | • Success perception: “From your perspective, student’s success PRIMARILY relies on their ability to” (“solve specific kinds of problems” versus “make connections and form logical arguments”) |
| Grouping factor | • Instructor | • Institution |
Fig. 1Student results. Estimated effects of the student factors on the odds that a student reported there was enough time in class to understand difficult ideas. The points represent the best estimate of the odds ratio, and the intervals represent the 90% (smaller, colored or black) and 95% (wider, black) confidence intervals for the ratios. Statistically significant odds ratios greater than one are shown in orange with triangle points and indicate students with higher levels of this factor are more likely to respond that there was enough time. Similarly, odds ratios in purple with diamond points are associated with students being less likely to respond that there was enough time
Fig. 2Instructor results. Estimated effects of the instructor factors on the odds that an instructor reported there was enough time in class to understand difficult ideas. The points represent the best estimate of the odds ratio, and the intervals represent the 90% (smaller, potentially colored) and 95% (wider, black) confidence intervals for the ratios. Confidence intervals that do not overlap one (shown in purple with diamond points) indicate the factor has a statistically significant association with instructor OTL reports at the .10 significance level
Student input variables
Instructor input variables
Student summary data
| Factor | Variable | Responses | ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| Traditionally marginalized or vulnerable populations | Gender | Male | 1341 (52%) |
| Female | 1221 (48%) | ||
| Classroom features | Instructor reports of “student-centered practices” | 1=less student-centered practices; 6=more | 3.2 (1.1) |
| Student preparation and perception of student preparation | Previous calculus experience | None | 764 (30%) |
| High school | 1610 (63%) | ||
| College | 188 (7%) | ||
| SAT/ACT mathematics percentile | 85.5 (14.2) | ||
| Ability to succeed: “I believe I have the knowledge and ability to succeed in this course” | Agree | 2164 (84.5%) | |
| Disagree | 398 (15.5%) | ||
| What it means to “succeed” in calculus | Success perception: “My success PRIMARILY relies on my ability to:” | “Solve specific kinds of problems” | 2023 (79%) |
| “Make connections and form logical arguments” | 539 (21%) | ||
| Outcome | Perception of OTL: “My calculus instructor allowed time for me to understand difficult ideas.” | Agree | 1984 (77%) |
| Disagree | 578 (23%) |
Instructor summary data
| Factor | Variable | Responses | ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| Traditionally marginalized or vulnerable populations | Gender | Male | 232 (71%) |
| Female | 95 (29%) | ||
| Instructor rank | GTA | 61 (19%) | |
| Lecturer | 114 (35%) | ||
| Tenure-track faculty | 43 (13%) | ||
| Tenured faculty | 109 (33%) | ||
| Classroom features | Common final | Yes | 222 (68%) |
| No | 105 (32%) | ||
| Instructor reports of “student-centered practices” | 1=less student-centered practices; 6=more | 3.3 (.98) | |
| Student preparation and perception of student preparation | Perceived student ability: “Approximately what percentage of students currently enrolled in your Calculus I course do you expect are academically prepared for the course?” | >80% | 94 (29%) |
| 60–80% | 143 (44%) | ||
| 40–60% | 68 (21%) | ||
| <40% | 22 (7%) | ||
| What it means to “succeed” in calculus | Success perception: “From your perspective, student’s success PRIMARILY relies on their ability to:” | “Solve specific kinds of problems” | 210 (64%) |
| “Make connections and form logical arguments” | 117 (36%) | ||
| Outcome | Perception of OTL: “When teaching my Calculus class, I had enough time during class to help students understand difficult ideas.” | Agree | 232 (71%) |
| Disagree | 95 (29%) |