Widening access and participation for learning introductory microeconomics: using students' own contextualised storytelling

Carl Sherwood
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Abstract

The fear of mathematics has long posed a barrier to wider participation and access for students to make sense of introductory microeconomics. The use of students' own written, contextualised stories as an assessment task was used to address the problem. Data was collected from a survey of 122 undergraduate and postgraduate students at an Australian leading research-intensive university to evaluate the impact on student learning. Preliminary findings suggested students' own contextualised stories helped them to meaningfully connect their learning to personal life experiences, link their learning to topical news events, and to appreciate the value of learning economics. Postgraduate students tended to value using contextualised stories twice as much as undergraduate students. The assessment task provides teachers of introductory micro economics insights into the value of students' own contextualised storytelling for learning, while also having implications for wider access and participation of mathematically challenged students from diverse backgrounds.
扩大微观经济学入门学习的途径和参与:使用学生自己的情境化故事
长期以来,对数学的恐惧一直是学生广泛参与和理解微观经济学入门的障碍。使用学生自己写的、情境化的故事作为评估任务来解决这个问题。数据收集自对澳大利亚一所顶尖研究型大学的122名本科生和研究生的调查,以评估对学生学习的影响。初步研究结果表明,学生自己的情境化故事有助于他们有意义地将学习与个人生活经历联系起来,将学习与时事新闻事件联系起来,并认识到学习经济学的价值。研究生对情境化故事的重视程度是本科生的两倍。这项评估任务为教授入门级微观经济学的教师提供了见解,让他们了解学生自己的情境化叙事对学习的价值,同时也对来自不同背景的数学挑战学生的更广泛接触和参与产生了影响。
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