| Literature DB >> 32453679 |
Virginia R Downing1, Katelyn M Cooper2, Jacqueline M Cala3, Logan E Gin1, Sara E Brownell1.
Abstract
Student anxiety is a growing concern for colleges and universities. As science classrooms transition from traditional lecture to active learning, researchers have sought to understand how active learning affects undergraduate anxiety. However, although community colleges educate nearly half of all undergraduates, no studies have explored the relationship between anxiety and active learning in the context of community college science courses. In this study, we interviewed 29 students enrolled across nine community colleges in the southwestern United States to probe factors that increase and decrease their anxiety in active-learning science courses. Using inductive coding, we identified a set of common factors that affect community college student anxiety in active learning. We found that community college student anxiety decreased when students perceived that active-learning activities enhanced their learning by providing them with multiple ways of learning or the opportunity to learn from others. We also identified fear of negative evaluation as the primary construct underlying student anxiety in active learning and described factors that mediated students' fear of negative evaluation in the community college science classroom. This work highlights how instructors can create more inclusive active-learning science classrooms by reducing student anxiety during active-learning instruction.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32453679 PMCID: PMC8697658 DOI: 10.1187/cbe.19-09-0186
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CBE Life Sci Educ ISSN: 1931-7913 Impact factor: 3.325
Summary of community college student participant demographics
| Demographics | All students |
|---|---|
| Gender | |
| Female | 76 (22) |
| Male | 24 (7) |
| Decline to state | 0 (0) |
| Race/ethnicity | |
| American Indian or Alaska Native | 3 (1) |
| Asian/Pacific Islander | 7 (2) |
| Black/African American | 7 (2) |
| Hispanic/Latinx | 31 (9) |
| White/Caucasian | 45 (13) |
| Multiple races | 3 (1) |
| Decline to state | 3 (1) |
| College generation status | |
| First generation | 41 (12) |
| Non–first generation | 55 (16) |
| Decline to state | 3 (1) |
| Hours worked per week | |
| Do not work | 31 (9) |
| 1–20 hours | 21 (6) |
| 21–40 hours | 31 (9) |
| 40+ hours | 17 (5) |
| Decline to state | 0 (0) |
| Serve as primary caregiver (e.g., to a child) | |
| Yes | 21 (6) |
| No | 79 (23) |
| Decline to state | 0 (0) |
| Intention to transfer | |
| Yes | 79 (23) |
| No | 21 (6) |
| Decline to state | |
| Career goal | |
| Nursing or allied health | 55 (16) |
| Non-science careers | 31 (9) |
| Science career | 7 (2) |
| Undecided | 7 (2) |
| GAD-7 score | |
| Minimal (GAD-7 score of <5) | 38 (11) |
| Mild (GAD-7 score of 6–9) | 34 (10) |
| Moderate (GAD-7 score of 10–14) | 28 (8) |