Importance of Academic Legacy on Student Success in First- and Second-Semester General Chemistry

IF 0.7 Q4 EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES African Journal of Research in Mathematics Science and Technology Education Pub Date : 2023-08-17 DOI:10.31756/jrsmte.631
G. Shelton, A. Villalta-Cerdas, B. Jang, A. Dubrovskiy, Blain Mamiya, Rebecca Weber, Susan Broadway, Vickie M. Williamson, Cynthia Powell, Diana Mason
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Abstract

This investigation sought to elucidate the influence of students' academic legacy on their prior knowledge and course outcomes providing crucial insights for educators who teach general chemistry. This six-semester analysis involved 6,914 students enrolled in classes across nine Texas universities. Explored were personal circumstances associated with students' successes and failures that influenced performance in on- and off-sequence, first- and second-semester general chemistry (Chem 1 and Chem 2). Students' academic legacy based on their categorization as first generation (neither grandparent nor parent/guardian with a 4-year bachelor's degree), second generation (at least one grandparent or parent/guardian with a bachelor's degree), or third generation (at least one grandparent and at least one parent/guardian hold a bachelor's degree) was investigated. Of the students in the dataset 33.8% (n = 2,340) self-identified as Hispanic. Results for Hispanic and non-Hispanic students indicated that first-generation students struggled more with Chem 1 and Chem 2 than students in the other two legacy groups. As students' academic legacy extended, they were more apt to succeed in general chemistry. Second- and third-generation students demonstrated stronger prior high-school chemistry backgrounds and were enrolled in more advanced mathematics courses. As expected, students with stronger academic backgrounds in chemistry and mathematics scored higher on the diagnostic MUST (Math-Up Skills Test), had greater self-efficacy relative to their preparation to succeed, and reported fewer paid work hours. First-generation students on the average entered with lower diagnostic MUST scores, felt less prepared to succeed, and disclosed a greater need to be employed.
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学术遗产对学生第一学期和第二学期普通化学成功的重要性
本调查旨在阐明学生的学术遗产对其先前知识和课程成果的影响,为教授普通化学的教育工作者提供重要的见解。这项为期六个学期的分析涉及德克萨斯州九所大学的6914名学生。研究了与学生的成功和失败相关的个人环境,这些环境会影响学生在顺序上和顺序上、第一学期和第二学期普通化学(化学1和化学2)的表现。学生的学术遗产基于他们的分类:第一代(祖父母和父母/监护人都没有4年的学士学位)、第二代(至少有一位祖父母或父母/监护人有学士学位)、或者第三代(至少有一位祖父母和至少一位父母/监护人拥有学士学位)被调查。在数据集中的学生中,33.8% (n = 2340)自认为是西班牙裔。西班牙裔和非西班牙裔学生的结果表明,第一代学生在化学1和化学2方面比其他两个传统群体的学生更困难。随着学生学术遗产的扩展,他们更容易在普通化学方面取得成功。第二代和第三代学生表现出更强的高中化学背景,并参加了更多的高等数学课程。正如预期的那样,在化学和数学方面有较强学术背景的学生在诊断性的MUST(数学向上技能测试)中得分更高,相对于他们为成功所做的准备,他们有更高的自我效能感,并且报告的有偿工作时间更少。平均而言,第一代学生入学时的诊断性MUST分数较低,对成功的准备不足,并且更需要被雇用。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.00
自引率
11.10%
发文量
22
期刊介绍: The editorial policy of'' the African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education (AJRMSTE) is to disseminate, as widely as possible, high quality research findings and well written articles on Curriculum Studies; Teacher Education; Education for Development; Mathematics Education; Science Education; Design & Technology Education and Computer Education. Articles that promote the understanding of curricular policy and diverse socio-cultural issues and those which stimulate epistemological and methodological debates are welcome. The editorial board welcomes articles that will contribute to the overall development of science, mathematics, technology and environmental education in Africa.
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