A structural equation model looking at student’s participatory behavior and their success in Calculus I

Abstract Background Government projections in the USA indicate that the country will need a million more science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) graduates above and beyond those already projected by the year 2022. Of crucial importance to the STEM pipeline is success in Calculus I,...

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Main Authors: Rachel Elizabeth Keller, Estrella Johnson, Steven DeShong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2017-11-01
Series:International Journal of STEM Education
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40594-017-0093-0
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spelling doaj-a94ed6bb778842f58333909fdc442db42020-11-25T00:33:38ZengSpringerOpenInternational Journal of STEM Education2196-78222017-11-014111110.1186/s40594-017-0093-0A structural equation model looking at student’s participatory behavior and their success in Calculus IRachel Elizabeth Keller0Estrella Johnson1Steven DeShong2Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State UniversityVirginia Polytechnic Institute and State UniversityVirginia Polytechnic Institute and State UniversityAbstract Background Government projections in the USA indicate that the country will need a million more science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) graduates above and beyond those already projected by the year 2022. Of crucial importance to the STEM pipeline is success in Calculus I, without which continuation in a STEM major is not possible. The STEM community at large, and mathematics instructors specifically, need to understand factors that influence and promote success in order to mitigate the alarming attrition trend. Previous work in this area has defined success singularly in terms of grades or persistence; however, these definitions are somewhat limiting and neglect the possible mediating effects of affective constructs like confidence, mindset, and enjoyment on the aforementioned markers of success. Using structural equation modeling, this paper explored the effect of participation on grades in freshman college calculus and investigated whether these effects were mediated by affective variables. Results Results indicated that participation had no significant direct effect on any of the success components in the final model—a finding that was not only counterintuitive but actually contradicted previous research done on this data. Participation was however highly correlated with two other exogenous variables indicating it would be inappropriate to dismiss it as being unrelated to success. Furthermore, the results suggested a cluster of affective success components and an achievement component with confidence being the intermediary between the two. Conclusions This paper extends upon previous work with this data set in which the effect of participatory behaviors on success was investigated wherein success was measured singularly with expected course grade and affective components of success were not considered. The limited explanatory power of the model, coupled with the seemingly contradictory results, indicates that participatory behaviors alone might be insufficient to capture the complexity of the success response variable.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40594-017-0093-0CalculusParticipationSuccessStructural equation modeling
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rachel Elizabeth Keller
Estrella Johnson
Steven DeShong
spellingShingle Rachel Elizabeth Keller
Estrella Johnson
Steven DeShong
A structural equation model looking at student’s participatory behavior and their success in Calculus I
International Journal of STEM Education
Calculus
Participation
Success
Structural equation modeling
author_facet Rachel Elizabeth Keller
Estrella Johnson
Steven DeShong
author_sort Rachel Elizabeth Keller
title A structural equation model looking at student’s participatory behavior and their success in Calculus I
title_short A structural equation model looking at student’s participatory behavior and their success in Calculus I
title_full A structural equation model looking at student’s participatory behavior and their success in Calculus I
title_fullStr A structural equation model looking at student’s participatory behavior and their success in Calculus I
title_full_unstemmed A structural equation model looking at student’s participatory behavior and their success in Calculus I
title_sort structural equation model looking at student’s participatory behavior and their success in calculus i
publisher SpringerOpen
series International Journal of STEM Education
issn 2196-7822
publishDate 2017-11-01
description Abstract Background Government projections in the USA indicate that the country will need a million more science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) graduates above and beyond those already projected by the year 2022. Of crucial importance to the STEM pipeline is success in Calculus I, without which continuation in a STEM major is not possible. The STEM community at large, and mathematics instructors specifically, need to understand factors that influence and promote success in order to mitigate the alarming attrition trend. Previous work in this area has defined success singularly in terms of grades or persistence; however, these definitions are somewhat limiting and neglect the possible mediating effects of affective constructs like confidence, mindset, and enjoyment on the aforementioned markers of success. Using structural equation modeling, this paper explored the effect of participation on grades in freshman college calculus and investigated whether these effects were mediated by affective variables. Results Results indicated that participation had no significant direct effect on any of the success components in the final model—a finding that was not only counterintuitive but actually contradicted previous research done on this data. Participation was however highly correlated with two other exogenous variables indicating it would be inappropriate to dismiss it as being unrelated to success. Furthermore, the results suggested a cluster of affective success components and an achievement component with confidence being the intermediary between the two. Conclusions This paper extends upon previous work with this data set in which the effect of participatory behaviors on success was investigated wherein success was measured singularly with expected course grade and affective components of success were not considered. The limited explanatory power of the model, coupled with the seemingly contradictory results, indicates that participatory behaviors alone might be insufficient to capture the complexity of the success response variable.
topic Calculus
Participation
Success
Structural equation modeling
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40594-017-0093-0
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