180 likes | 488 Views
Cognitive Test Anxiety. Jerrell C. Cassady. Test Anxiety. Classically categorized into 2 components: Emotionality (Affective TA) Heightened physiological activity Appraisal of panic symptoms as related to tests Worry -- aka “Cognitive Test Anxiety” Self-deprecating ruminations
E N D
Cognitive Test Anxiety Jerrell C. Cassady
Test Anxiety Classically categorized into 2 components: • Emotionality (Affective TA) • Heightened physiological activity • Appraisal of panic symptoms as related to tests • Worry -- aka “Cognitive Test Anxiety” • Self-deprecating ruminations • Distraction • Interference • Poor cognitive processing
Cognitive Test Anxiety • Most commonly affiliated component with performance deficits: • IQ • Standardized tests of achievement • Classroom tests • Performance activities (alt. assessments) • Memory tasks
Cognitive Test Anxiety Cognitive Interference Model • Information is available to the learner, but the anxiety leads to interference with retrieval efforts. • Cue overload due to inappropriate “restriction of range” for the memorial attempt • Inappropriate attentional focus • Strategically-flawed LTM search strategies
Cognitive Test Anxiety Information Processing Model • Multiple aspects of the learning/retrieval system lead to poor outcomes • Inappropriate encoding strategies prohibit effective acquisition • Ineffective rehearsal strategies limit long term storage and retrieval • Deficient organization prohibits optimal recall
Additive Model of TA Full awareness of impact of TA on learning is available only when considering both “state” and “trait” components of TA. • Trait-level test anxiety refers to typical level of anxiety for tests (present in all testing situations) • State or situational factors include: threat of current test, self-confidence for content, awareness of study preparedness, external pressures (teacher, parent) for specific test
Learning - Testing Cycle Test Preparation Phase • Study skills & strategies • Study time and efficiency (repetition) • Procrastination -- impedes primarly at “finals” • Cognitive processing/encoding • Surface-level processing • Low self-regulation (monitor effort and progress) • Perceived threat of tests • Misappraisal of need to study/prepare
Learning - Testing Cycle Test Performance Phase • Anxiety blockage phenomenon (high anxiety, good study skills, easy items) • Interference during test session • Distraction from test • Decision-making impaired under stressful situations when “confidence” levels fall for knowledge • Initial response to items on test -- panic and fear response
Learning - Testing Cycle Test Reflection Phase • Interpretation of failure/success (attributions) • Self-efficacy judgments • Goal establishment for future tests (approach/avoidance) • Development of “fear” for tests -- (ie, tests are seen as threatening events -- sparking avoidance, perseveration) • Helplessness orientations • Influence coping strategies in future test situations
Cassady, J. C. (2001). The stability of undergraduate students' cognitive test anxiety levels. Practical Assessment, Research & Evaluation, 7(20). Available online: http://PAREonline.net/getvn.asp?v=7&n=20. • Report on stability of CTA over time • Stable “trait-like” measure of test anxiety
Cassady, J. C., & Johnson, R. E. (2002). Cognitive test anxiety, procrastination, and academic performance. Contemporary Educational Psychology, 27, 270-295. • High cognitive test anxiety associated with lower performance on course exams and SATs • Gender differences exist in reported CTA, but no impact on performance • Moderate emotionality helps test performance. • CTA related to procrastination -- however procrastination only impaired performance on final exam
Cassady, J. C. (2004). The influence of cognitive test anxiety across the learning-testing cycle. Learning and Instruction, 14(6), 569-592. • Test anxious students have same number of notes for test, but have more “copied definitions” • Higher “perceived threat” for tests • Lower self-reported study skills • Higher emotionality scores • Lower test scores • Higher rates of “helplessness”
Cassady, J. C. (2004).The impact of cognitive test anxiety on text comprehension and recall in the absence of salient evaluative pressure. Applied Cognitive Psychology, 18(3), 311-325. • Cognitive test anxiety influences performance on memory and test tasks even when there is no salient external evaluative pressure. • Performance did not vary greatly for test anxious students based on “form” of task in non-evaluative setting -- suggesting general processing issue • Cognitive test anxiety had a larger loading factor for “high evaluative pressure” situations -- supporting the additive model. • Cognitive test anxiety is largely a trait construct.
Cassady, J. C., Mohammed, A., & Mathieu, L. (2004). Cross-cultural differences in test anxiety: Women in Kuwait and the United States. Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 35(6), 715-718. • Females in US and Kuwait differ in their anxiety profiles for tests. • US females -- higher perceived threat for testing situations • Kuwait females -- higher levels of emotionality • Collectivist vs competitive society view
Cassady, J. C. & Gridley, B. E. (2005). The effects of online formative and summative assessment on test anxiety and performance. Journal of Technology, Learning, & Assessment 4(1). Available online: http://www.jtla.org • No evidence that online testing induces greater test anxiety than in-class • HIGHER perceived threat of tests for in-class tests (lower personal control) • Practice tests (online) provided boost to performance on summative tests (immediate post-performance feedback) • Practice tests provide test anxious students with a reasonable strategy to overcome typical negative outcomes -- greater personal control over preparation
New work • Argentina & US sample -- demonstrated slight difference in representations for tests. Self-other comparisons unusual in Argentina • Revision of CTA -- shorter, all positively worded, new items focusing on preparation phase • Notes study -- content analysis of notes from students with varied levels of CTA • CTA and online testing -- timing of tests as well as number of tests taken as practice
Next Direction • Expanding “Academic Anxiety” conceptions • Connection to depression and related disorders • Examination from perspectives of coping and emotional intelligence • Younger populations