基于色彩的教学方法如何提高会计专业一年级学生的成绩

Q1 Social Sciences
Mark Bracken Wilson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

长期以来,如何提高会计入门课程中成绩较差的四分之一学生的成绩一直令教育工作者感到困惑。成绩不佳的学生往往宁愿选择其他学科专业,努力通过更高级的会计试卷,或者干脆放弃高等教育学习。然而,成绩不佳的学生可能是由于缺乏对其偏好的学习方式的适应能力,而非能力不足。本研究探讨了新西兰一所学院为会计专业一年级学生量身定制的基于色彩的教学方法对提高学生理解能力和期末成绩的影响。这种基于色彩的教学方法将视觉化的教学风格带入了以音频/阅读/动觉为主的大学会计环境中。两届共 58 名学生采用了这种基于色彩的教学方法。学生的期末百分制成绩与前两届 71 名学生的期末总成绩进行了对比分析。研究结果表明,在引入色彩教学法后,学生的期末成绩在四个四分位数中均有显著提高。这些结果可以成功地复制到学生初次接触会计的任何学习环境中。这项研究的结果对政策和教学法都有影响,它表明,以学习者为中心的方法,通过令人难忘的视觉元素来增强传统的灰度教学,可以对各个层次的学习者产生积极影响。最值得注意的是,它可以提高传统上被视为成绩不佳的学生群体的成绩。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
How a color-based teaching method has lifted grades for first-year accounting students
Improving grades for students in the lower quartile of introductory accounting courses has long baffled educators. Students who underperform often prefer to find other subject majors, struggle to pass the more advanced accounting papers or drop out of higher education study altogether. Yet students who underperform may do so as much due to a lack of affordance for their preferred learning style, as to any lack in capability. This research explores the impact of a bespoke color-based teaching method introduced to first-year accounting students at a New Zealand institute in an effort to increase student comprehension and improve final grades. The color-based teaching method brings a visual style of teaching and learning into a predominantly audio/reader/kinesthetic university accounting environment. The color-based method was introduced to 58 students over two cohorts. The students’ final percentage grades were analysed against the final overall grades of students in the previous two cohorts of 71 students, who were taught without the aid of the color-based method. The results of this research show that students’ final grades showed a statistically significant improvement in each of the four quartiles following the introduction of the color-based teaching method. These results could be successfully replicated in any learning environment where students are first introduced to accounting. The findings of this study have implications for policy and pedagogy, suggesting that a learner-centred approach which seeks to augment a traditionally greyscale delivery with memorable visual elements, can have a positive impact on learners of all levels. Most noteworthy, it can advance the achievements of the group of students who are traditionally seen as underperforming.
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来源期刊
Journal of Accounting Education
Journal of Accounting Education Social Sciences-Education
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
27
期刊介绍: The Journal of Accounting Education (JAEd) is a refereed journal dedicated to promoting and publishing research on accounting education issues and to improving the quality of accounting education worldwide. The Journal provides a vehicle for making results of empirical studies available to educators and for exchanging ideas, instructional resources, and best practices that help improve accounting education. The Journal includes four sections: a Main Articles Section, a Teaching and Educational Notes Section, an Educational Case Section, and a Best Practices Section. Manuscripts published in the Main Articles Section generally present results of empirical studies, although non-empirical papers (such as policy-related or essay papers) are sometimes published in this section. Papers published in the Teaching and Educational Notes Section include short empirical pieces (e.g., replications) as well as instructional resources that are not properly categorized as cases, which are published in a separate Case Section. Note: as part of the Teaching Note accompany educational cases, authors must include implementation guidance (based on actual case usage) and evidence regarding the efficacy of the case vis-a-vis a listing of educational objectives associated with the case. To meet the efficacy requirement, authors must include direct assessment (e.g grades by case requirement/objective or pre-post tests). Although interesting and encouraged, student perceptions (surveys) are considered indirect assessment and do not meet the efficacy requirement. The case must have been used more than once in a course to avoid potential anomalies and to vet the case before submission. Authors may be asked to collect additional data, depending on course size/circumstances.
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