解决地学数学焦虑的干预措施

Q1 Social Sciences
Rachel M. Headley
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引用次数: 1

摘要

摘要数学焦虑包括中度到极度的恐惧、焦虑,偶尔还有与预期或执行数学任务相关的身体疼痛。高水平的数学焦虑与学生的数学水平较低以及选择数量挑战性较小的课程和职业有关。在一所以本科生为主的大学的一个小型地球科学项目中,数学焦虑是通过一项标准化的数学焦虑评级调查来评估的,该调查嵌入了一项更普遍的焦虑调查中。在低风险和高风险评估中都使用了一种涉及重新表述以地球科学为重点的定量单词问题的干预措施。在专业和普通教育水平都没有干预的课程中,学生的数学焦虑评分相似,整个学期没有显著变化。相比之下,在统计学上,与大型对照组相比,干预专业课程的学生的数学焦虑更有可能下降,也与类似水平课程的小型对照组相比。在地球科学课堂上,与定量任务相比,重新表述定量问题以更多地关注地球科学知识似乎是降低数学焦虑的可行方法,同时为学生提供建立定量技能的经验。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
An intervention to address math anxiety in the geosciences
Abstract Math anxiety involves moderate to extreme fear, anxiety, and occasionally physical pain associated with anticipating or performing mathematical tasks. High levels of math anxiety have been tied to students taking lower levels of math and choosing less quantitatively challenging courses and careers. In a small geoscience program in a primarily undergraduate university, math anxiety has been assessed using a standardized math anxiety rating survey embedded into a more general anxiety survey. An intervention that involves re-phrasing geoscience-focused quantitative word problems was used on both low- and high-stakes assessments. In courses with no intervention at both the major and general education levels, students were found to have similar math anxiety ratings and no significant change over the semester. In contrast, students in the intervention major courses were statistically more likely to have a drop in their math anxiety when compared to the large control and also when compared to a smaller control of similar-level courses. In a geoscience classroom, rephrasing quantitative questions to focus more on geoscience knowledge versus the quantitative task appears to be a viable way to lower math anxiety while giving students’ experience to build their quantitative skills.
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来源期刊
Journal of Geoscience Education
Journal of Geoscience Education Social Sciences-Education
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
32
期刊介绍: The Journal of Geoscience Education (JGE) is a peer-reviewed publication for geoscience education research, and serves as an international forum for research concerning the pedagogy, assessment, and philosophy of teaching and learning about the geosciences and related domains. JGE is a publication of the National Association of Geoscience Teachers, a non-profit, member-driven organization that supports a diverse, inclusive, and thriving community of educators and education researchers to improve teaching and learning about the Earth.
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