Equity investigation of attitudinal shifts in introductory physics

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Equity investigation of attitudinal shifts in introductory physics. / Traxler, Adrienne; Brewe, Eric.

In: Physical Review Special Topics - Physics Education Research, Vol. 11, No. 2, 020132, 2015.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Traxler, A & Brewe, E 2015, 'Equity investigation of attitudinal shifts in introductory physics', Physical Review Special Topics - Physics Education Research, vol. 11, no. 2, 020132. https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevstper.11.020132

APA

Traxler, A., & Brewe, E. (2015). Equity investigation of attitudinal shifts in introductory physics. Physical Review Special Topics - Physics Education Research, 11(2), [020132]. https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevstper.11.020132

Vancouver

Traxler A, Brewe E. Equity investigation of attitudinal shifts in introductory physics. Physical Review Special Topics - Physics Education Research. 2015;11(2). 020132. https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevstper.11.020132

Author

Traxler, Adrienne ; Brewe, Eric. / Equity investigation of attitudinal shifts in introductory physics. In: Physical Review Special Topics - Physics Education Research. 2015 ; Vol. 11, No. 2.

Bibtex

@article{bc28baf3a6d0462d90ad73754cf1a2a7,
title = "Equity investigation of attitudinal shifts in introductory physics",
abstract = "We report on seven years of attitudinal data using the Colorado Learning Attitudes about Science Survey from University Modeling Instruction (UMI) sections of introductory physics at Florida International University. University Modeling Instruction is a curricular and pedagogical transformation of introductory university physics that engages students in building and testing conceptual models in an integrated lab and lecture learning environment. This work expands upon previous studies that reported consistently positive attitude shifts in UMI courses; here, we disaggregate the data by gender and ethnicity to look for any disparities in the pattern of favorable shifts. We find that women and students from statistically underrepresented ethnic groups have gains that are comparable to those of men and students from well-represented ethnic groups on this attitudinal measure, and that this result holds even when interaction effects of gender and ethnicity are included. We conclude with suggestions for future work in UMI courses and for attitudinal equity investigations generally. We encourage researchers to expand their scope beyond simple performance gaps when considering equity concerns, and to avoid relying on a single measure to evaluate student success. Finally, we conjecture that students{\textquoteright} social and academic networks are one means by which attitudinal and efficacy beliefs about the course are propagated.",
author = "Adrienne Traxler and Eric Brewe",
year = "2015",
doi = "10.1103/physrevstper.11.020132",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
journal = "Physical Review Special Topics - Physics Education Research",
issn = "1554-9178",
publisher = "APS Physics",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Equity investigation of attitudinal shifts in introductory physics

AU - Traxler, Adrienne

AU - Brewe, Eric

PY - 2015

Y1 - 2015

N2 - We report on seven years of attitudinal data using the Colorado Learning Attitudes about Science Survey from University Modeling Instruction (UMI) sections of introductory physics at Florida International University. University Modeling Instruction is a curricular and pedagogical transformation of introductory university physics that engages students in building and testing conceptual models in an integrated lab and lecture learning environment. This work expands upon previous studies that reported consistently positive attitude shifts in UMI courses; here, we disaggregate the data by gender and ethnicity to look for any disparities in the pattern of favorable shifts. We find that women and students from statistically underrepresented ethnic groups have gains that are comparable to those of men and students from well-represented ethnic groups on this attitudinal measure, and that this result holds even when interaction effects of gender and ethnicity are included. We conclude with suggestions for future work in UMI courses and for attitudinal equity investigations generally. We encourage researchers to expand their scope beyond simple performance gaps when considering equity concerns, and to avoid relying on a single measure to evaluate student success. Finally, we conjecture that students’ social and academic networks are one means by which attitudinal and efficacy beliefs about the course are propagated.

AB - We report on seven years of attitudinal data using the Colorado Learning Attitudes about Science Survey from University Modeling Instruction (UMI) sections of introductory physics at Florida International University. University Modeling Instruction is a curricular and pedagogical transformation of introductory university physics that engages students in building and testing conceptual models in an integrated lab and lecture learning environment. This work expands upon previous studies that reported consistently positive attitude shifts in UMI courses; here, we disaggregate the data by gender and ethnicity to look for any disparities in the pattern of favorable shifts. We find that women and students from statistically underrepresented ethnic groups have gains that are comparable to those of men and students from well-represented ethnic groups on this attitudinal measure, and that this result holds even when interaction effects of gender and ethnicity are included. We conclude with suggestions for future work in UMI courses and for attitudinal equity investigations generally. We encourage researchers to expand their scope beyond simple performance gaps when considering equity concerns, and to avoid relying on a single measure to evaluate student success. Finally, we conjecture that students’ social and academic networks are one means by which attitudinal and efficacy beliefs about the course are propagated.

U2 - 10.1103/physrevstper.11.020132

DO - 10.1103/physrevstper.11.020132

M3 - Journal article

VL - 11

JO - Physical Review Special Topics - Physics Education Research

JF - Physical Review Special Topics - Physics Education Research

SN - 1554-9178

IS - 2

M1 - 020132

ER -

ID: 332946369