An Empirical Study of Business Student Engagement with Active Teaching Strategies: A Comparison of First Year and Senior Students

The quantitative evaluation of student engagement has been difficult to achieve. This study uses Kahu’s (2013) conceptual framework to investigate the effectiveness of active teaching strategies and how they influence Business students’ engagement in a blended learning environment. First, we quantif...

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Main Authors: Amir Arjomandi, Juergen H. Seufert, Martin O'Brien, L. Celeste Rossetto
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Pompea College of Business 2021-05-01
Series:American Business Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.newhaven.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1326&context=americanbusinessreview
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spelling doaj-6f7e9d9d947246e9968d690843dc2f452021-06-21T18:03:04ZengPompea College of BusinessAmerican Business Review0743-23482689-88102021-05-01241678910.37625/abr.24.1.67-89An Empirical Study of Business Student Engagement with Active Teaching Strategies: A Comparison of First Year and Senior StudentsAmir Arjomandi0Juergen H. Seufert1Martin O'Brien 2L. Celeste Rossetto3University of WollongongWenzhou Kean UniversityUniversity of WollongongUniversity of WollongongThe quantitative evaluation of student engagement has been difficult to achieve. This study uses Kahu’s (2013) conceptual framework to investigate the effectiveness of active teaching strategies and how they influence Business students’ engagement in a blended learning environment. First, we quantify the influence of various in-class active teaching activities and out-of-class support tools upon student engagement. The link between engagement and student outcomes in terms of academic results and personal and professional skills development is then captured in our empirical modelling. Results are compared between first year and senior students to understand significant differences in their engagement and experience. Our findings suggest that first year students display a higher propensity to utilize in-class learning activities and out-of-class support tools. This in turn, establishes a strong link with their engagement patterns. However, there is a weaker link between first year student engagement and outcomes compared to senior students. Overall, this study reinforces the usefulness of Kahu’s framework to guide curricula developments that cater for learners’ different needs.https://digitalcommons.newhaven.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1326&context=americanbusinessreviewundergraduate teachingstudent engagementactive teaching strategiesfirst year studentssenior studentssimultaneous equations
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Amir Arjomandi
Juergen H. Seufert
Martin O'Brien
L. Celeste Rossetto
spellingShingle Amir Arjomandi
Juergen H. Seufert
Martin O'Brien
L. Celeste Rossetto
An Empirical Study of Business Student Engagement with Active Teaching Strategies: A Comparison of First Year and Senior Students
American Business Review
undergraduate teaching
student engagement
active teaching strategies
first year students
senior students
simultaneous equations
author_facet Amir Arjomandi
Juergen H. Seufert
Martin O'Brien
L. Celeste Rossetto
author_sort Amir Arjomandi
title An Empirical Study of Business Student Engagement with Active Teaching Strategies: A Comparison of First Year and Senior Students
title_short An Empirical Study of Business Student Engagement with Active Teaching Strategies: A Comparison of First Year and Senior Students
title_full An Empirical Study of Business Student Engagement with Active Teaching Strategies: A Comparison of First Year and Senior Students
title_fullStr An Empirical Study of Business Student Engagement with Active Teaching Strategies: A Comparison of First Year and Senior Students
title_full_unstemmed An Empirical Study of Business Student Engagement with Active Teaching Strategies: A Comparison of First Year and Senior Students
title_sort empirical study of business student engagement with active teaching strategies: a comparison of first year and senior students
publisher Pompea College of Business
series American Business Review
issn 0743-2348
2689-8810
publishDate 2021-05-01
description The quantitative evaluation of student engagement has been difficult to achieve. This study uses Kahu’s (2013) conceptual framework to investigate the effectiveness of active teaching strategies and how they influence Business students’ engagement in a blended learning environment. First, we quantify the influence of various in-class active teaching activities and out-of-class support tools upon student engagement. The link between engagement and student outcomes in terms of academic results and personal and professional skills development is then captured in our empirical modelling. Results are compared between first year and senior students to understand significant differences in their engagement and experience. Our findings suggest that first year students display a higher propensity to utilize in-class learning activities and out-of-class support tools. This in turn, establishes a strong link with their engagement patterns. However, there is a weaker link between first year student engagement and outcomes compared to senior students. Overall, this study reinforces the usefulness of Kahu’s framework to guide curricula developments that cater for learners’ different needs.
topic undergraduate teaching
student engagement
active teaching strategies
first year students
senior students
simultaneous equations
url https://digitalcommons.newhaven.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1326&context=americanbusinessreview
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