COLLABORATIVE TESTING IN STATISTICS: GROUP INTERACTION, ANXIETY, AND CLASS PERFORMANCE

Authors

  • SUSAN KAPITANOFF American Jewish University
  • CAROL PANDEY Los Angeles Pierce College

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.52041/serj.v17i2.158

Keywords:

Statistics education research, Collaborative learning, Statistics anxiety, Test anxiety, Women and statistics

Abstract

Seventy-one students in two community college Statistics for the Social Sciences classes took six exams either individually or collaboratively. Assignment to test condition was randomly determined for each exam. Scores on collaboratively-taken exams were significantly higher than those for individually-taken exams, particularly for students with low GPAs and high test anxiety. Women’s, but not men’s, performances on the mid-term and final exams was related to the quality and quantity of their collaborative interactions. Thus, examining both quantity and quality of collaboration adds to our understanding of the underlying mechanisms of collaborative testing.

First published November 2018 at Statistics Education Research Journal Archives

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Published

2018-11-30

Issue

Section

Regular Articles