Students’ and Instructors’ Understandings, Attitudes and Beliefs about Educational Theories: Results of a Mixed-Methods Study

(1) Background: Educational theories are a constitutive element of educational studies. Despite their theoretical relevance, little is still known about students’ and instructors’ understandings of educational theories and their theory-related attitudes and beliefs. (2) Methods: To elucidate these c...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Stefan T. Siegel, Martin Daumiller
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-04-01
Series:Education Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/11/5/197
id doaj-ad1c421be56e4f38b79879cf1025edb6
record_format Article
spelling doaj-ad1c421be56e4f38b79879cf1025edb62021-04-23T23:01:33ZengMDPI AGEducation Sciences2227-71022021-04-011119719710.3390/educsci11050197Students’ and Instructors’ Understandings, Attitudes and Beliefs about Educational Theories: Results of a Mixed-Methods StudyStefan T. Siegel0Martin Daumiller1Department of Educational Science, University of Augsburg, 86159 Augsburg, GermanyDepartment of Psychology, University of Augsburg, 86159 Augsburg, Germany(1) Background: Educational theories are a constitutive element of educational studies. Despite their theoretical relevance, little is still known about students’ and instructors’ understandings of educational theories and their theory-related attitudes and beliefs. (2) Methods: To elucidate these constructs and to test their relevance, we conducted a mixed-methods study with 32 students and 12 instructors of educational studies at a German university. (3) Results: We found that both groups perceived educational theories as rather abstract concepts. Students reported rather negative attitudes and naive beliefs. For both groups, we found that attitudes and beliefs were strongly tied to motivational and affective aspects when dealing with educational theories, which stresses their relevance for educational studies. (4) Conclusions: We suggest a systematic theoretical clarification of the term educational theories. Furthermore, consideration of students’ and instructors’ theory-related attitudes and beliefs can give rise to meaningful practical implications (e.g., through self-reflection).https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/11/5/197educational theorytheory-related attitudesepistemic beliefseducational studiesmixed methods study
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stefan T. Siegel
Martin Daumiller
spellingShingle Stefan T. Siegel
Martin Daumiller
Students’ and Instructors’ Understandings, Attitudes and Beliefs about Educational Theories: Results of a Mixed-Methods Study
Education Sciences
educational theory
theory-related attitudes
epistemic beliefs
educational studies
mixed methods study
author_facet Stefan T. Siegel
Martin Daumiller
author_sort Stefan T. Siegel
title Students’ and Instructors’ Understandings, Attitudes and Beliefs about Educational Theories: Results of a Mixed-Methods Study
title_short Students’ and Instructors’ Understandings, Attitudes and Beliefs about Educational Theories: Results of a Mixed-Methods Study
title_full Students’ and Instructors’ Understandings, Attitudes and Beliefs about Educational Theories: Results of a Mixed-Methods Study
title_fullStr Students’ and Instructors’ Understandings, Attitudes and Beliefs about Educational Theories: Results of a Mixed-Methods Study
title_full_unstemmed Students’ and Instructors’ Understandings, Attitudes and Beliefs about Educational Theories: Results of a Mixed-Methods Study
title_sort students’ and instructors’ understandings, attitudes and beliefs about educational theories: results of a mixed-methods study
publisher MDPI AG
series Education Sciences
issn 2227-7102
publishDate 2021-04-01
description (1) Background: Educational theories are a constitutive element of educational studies. Despite their theoretical relevance, little is still known about students’ and instructors’ understandings of educational theories and their theory-related attitudes and beliefs. (2) Methods: To elucidate these constructs and to test their relevance, we conducted a mixed-methods study with 32 students and 12 instructors of educational studies at a German university. (3) Results: We found that both groups perceived educational theories as rather abstract concepts. Students reported rather negative attitudes and naive beliefs. For both groups, we found that attitudes and beliefs were strongly tied to motivational and affective aspects when dealing with educational theories, which stresses their relevance for educational studies. (4) Conclusions: We suggest a systematic theoretical clarification of the term educational theories. Furthermore, consideration of students’ and instructors’ theory-related attitudes and beliefs can give rise to meaningful practical implications (e.g., through self-reflection).
topic educational theory
theory-related attitudes
epistemic beliefs
educational studies
mixed methods study
url https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/11/5/197
work_keys_str_mv AT stefantsiegel studentsandinstructorsunderstandingsattitudesandbeliefsabouteducationaltheoriesresultsofamixedmethodsstudy
AT martindaumiller studentsandinstructorsunderstandingsattitudesandbeliefsabouteducationaltheoriesresultsofamixedmethodsstudy
_version_ 1721512202613030912