WHEN DO STUDENTS’ ATTITUDES CHANGE? INVESTIGATING STUDENT ATTITUDES AT MIDTERM

Authors

  • APRIL T. KERBY Winona State University
  • JACQUELINE R. WROUGHTON Northern Kentucky University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.52041/serj.v16i2.202

Keywords:

Statistics education research, urvey of Students’ Attitudes Towards Statistics (SATS-36)

Abstract

Statistics educators have been investigating how students’ attitudes change in the introductory statistics course for many years. Typically, an overall decrease in mean attitudes over the course has been noted. However, when and how do students’ attitudes change during the term? Do they steadily decrease or is there a point when students’ attitudes might actually be increasing? If so, can instructors use this to their advantage? This research introduced a mid-semester survey of attitudes. We found that students’ attitudes are not necessarily strictly declining from the beginning to the end of the semester. We also found it might be advantageous to follow individual student attitude trends throughout the semester instead of just looking at aggregate mean scores for the different surveys.

First published November 2017 at Statistics Education Research Journal Archives

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Published

2022-06-15