How Can Blended Learning and GeoGebra Promote Students’ Achievement in Calculus during the COVID-19 Pandemic?

H. Syarifuddin, I. Arnawa, S. Bahri, Nova Noliza Bakar, Budi Rahmadya, Fitri Adona
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Abstract

: Calculus is one of the most important courses to take, especially for those studying science and engineering because it can help them understand concepts and formulas in these fields. The COVID-19 pandemic impacts learning in universities globally. Observations from three colleges in West Sumatera (Padang State University, Andalas University, and Padang State Polytechnic) revealed that during the COVID-19 pandemic, students' achievement was unsatisfactory due to entirely online calculus lectures. The study's main goal was to see how blended learning and GeoGebra-based Calculus courses affected student achievement in online learning. The population of this study consisted of 224 undergraduate students from Andalas University who were enrolled in Calculus courses in the 2021 academic year's odd semesters, divided into four classes: A1, A2, A3, and A4, whereas the research sample consisted of two classes (A1 and A4) with 114 students randomly selected. Lectures were held seven times in the experiment and control classes, using blended learning and GeoGebra aid in the experiment class and fully online learning in the control class. A four-question midterm test was employed in this study as an instrument. The test is based on the learning objectives of the calculus course and has been declared valid by experts in mathematics and mathematics education. The findings show that using blended learning and GeoGebra to teach and learn calculus positively impacts achievement. More student collaboration, more student-centered knowledge growth and engagement, more flexibility in learning and teaching, and a well-balanced array of learning resources and methodologies are all benefits of blended learning and GeoGebra. A significant difference was in calculus achievement between male and female students, and there was no interaction between gender and learning factors toward calculus achievement in online learning.
新冠肺炎疫情期间,混合学习和GeoGebra如何促进学生微积分成绩?
微积分是最重要的课程之一,特别是对那些学习科学和工程的人来说,因为它可以帮助他们理解这些领域的概念和公式。COVID-19大流行影响了全球大学的学习。通过对西苏门答腊三所高校(巴东州立大学、安达拉斯大学和巴东州立理工学院)的观察发现,在新冠肺炎疫情期间,由于微积分课程完全在线,学生的成绩不理想。这项研究的主要目标是了解混合学习和基于geogebra的微积分课程如何影响学生在在线学习中的成绩。本研究的总体为安达拉斯大学2021学年单学期微积分课程的224名本科生,分为A1、A2、A3和A4四个班,而研究样本为A1和A4两个班,随机抽取114名学生。实验班和对照班共举办7次讲座,实验班采用混合式学习和GeoGebra辅助教学,对照班采用全在线学习。本研究采用四题期中测验作为工具。该测试基于微积分课程的学习目标,并已被数学和数学教育专家宣布有效。研究结果表明,使用混合学习和GeoGebra来教和学微积分对成绩有积极的影响。更多的学生合作,更多以学生为中心的知识增长和参与,更灵活的学习和教学,以及均衡的学习资源和方法,都是混合式学习和GeoGebra的好处。男女学生的微积分成绩有显著差异,性别和学习因素对在线学习中的微积分成绩没有交互作用。
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