1 / 14

The Science & Math Values Inventories: A Status Report

The Science & Math Values Inventories: A Status Report. The ACS Reform of Introductory Science Courses for Non-Majors Program November 13, 2004 Millsaps College Bruce Callen Don Deeds V. Luttrell M. Wood C. Allen Drury University This work is supported by NSF under

aman
Download Presentation

The Science & Math Values Inventories: A Status Report

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Science & Math Values Inventories: A Status Report The ACS Reform of Introductory Science Courses for Non-Majors Program November 13, 2004 Millsaps College Bruce Callen Don Deeds V. Luttrell M. Wood C. Allen Drury University This work is supported by NSF under Award DUE-0243207

  2. Do students value literacy? • We want students to consider science relevant and important • Affective, as well as content, goals • Science & Math Values Inventory • Goal: a valid & reliable instrument • Four domains of value: • Attainment Utility • Interest Personal Cost

  3. Useful in course design • Is what we’re doing useful to students? • Interesting to students? • Have a cost that is reasonable to them?

  4. Survey design • Two separate instruments, each with 25-45 Lichter-scale items • 4-7 items on each domain to construct a scale • Domains and items validated by experts, and affirmed by large-scale student tryouts

  5. Example format

  6. Domain 1: Interest • Importance a student places on science (math) because of genuine interest • Items ask students to reflect on the intrinsic satisfaction they receive from learning about science (math), either in or out of the classroom

  7. Domain 2: Utility of Understanding • Importance a student place on understanding science (math) because it helps accomplish short- or long-term goals • Items ask students to reflect on what they have to gain personally by understanding scientific (math) concepts, or reflect on personal benefits of taking science courses • NEW: two components—future and present utility

  8. Domain 3: Personal Cost • Sacrifices a student believes are required to develop an understanding, or to do well in science (math) courses • Items ask students to reflect on what may be lost, given up, or compromised in order to master scientific (math) concepts • NEW: 3 components—time cost, self-esteem costs, costs to religious outlook

  9. Domain 4: Attainment • Importance a student places on doing well in science (math) • Items ask students to reflect on importance of developing a good understanding or achieving at high levels in science (math) courses (not why it is important)

  10. First SVI Tryout: Spring ‘04 • 1,587 usable surveys (out of 1,804) • Factor analysis to identify sets of questions that group together • Seven (not four!) domains • Interest and utility strongly correlated • Internal consistency estimates exceeded 0.70 across all domains

  11. Interest Time Cost Cost to Self-Esteem Cost to Religious Outlook Attainment Present Utility Future Utility Results from SVI Tryout 1 • Examination of seven factors identified these domains:

  12. Timetable: Science • Expert evaluation of domains (done) • Expert evaluation of item match (done) • Student evaluation of item clarity (done) • Large-scale tryout #1 (done: Spring ‘04) • Analysis; development of tryout #2 (done) • Large-scale tryout #2 (done: Fall ‘04) • Test/retest, social influence (Spring ‘05) • Final science inventory: Fall 2005

  13. Timetable: Math • Expert evaluation of domains (done) • Expert evaluation of item match (done) • Student evaluation of item clarity (done) • Large-scale tryout #1 (in process: Fall ‘04) • Analysis; development of tryout #2 (Winter ‘04) • Large-scale tryout #2 (Spring ‘05) • Test/retest, social influence (Fall ‘05) • Final science inventory: Spring 2006

  14. ACS Use of SVI • Available for Spring 2005 • Approval of Human Subject Research on your campus • Returned to Drury for scoring and analysis • Report provided to ACS institutions

More Related