Students’ Misconceptions in Psychology: How You Ask Matters…Sometimes

Misconceptions about psychology are prevalent among introductory students. Just how prevalent and what can be done to change these misconceptions depends on valid methods of assessment. The most common method of assessment, the true/false questionnaire, is problematic.  The present study compared t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Annette Taylor, Patricia Kowalski
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Indiana University Office of Scholarly Publishing 2012-09-01
Series:Journal of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.iu.edu/journals/index.php/josotl/article/view/2150
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spelling doaj-ec03c9ac9fdc4712ab0df1606ad2a2842020-11-25T00:51:42ZengIndiana University Office of Scholarly PublishingJournal of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning1527-93162012-09-01123Students’ Misconceptions in Psychology: How You Ask Matters…SometimesAnnette Taylor0Patricia KowalskiUniversity of San Diego Misconceptions about psychology are prevalent among introductory students. Just how prevalent and what can be done to change these misconceptions depends on valid methods of assessment. The most common method of assessment, the true/false questionnaire, is problematic.  The present study compared true/false with forced choice formats to determine whether the formats give different estimates of student misconceptions. Introductory psychology students (N = 165) answered 39 misconceptions in both the true/false and forced choice formats.  Students differed in accuracy when assessed with the different formats, with 33.05% accuracy for true/false and 41.29% accuracy for forced choice.  In the analyses of individual items we observed that some items did not differ in level of accuracy across formats and other items did differ.  We conclude that the true/false method of assessing misconceptions may overestimate students’ level of misconception and recommend continued attention to how researchers assess misconceptions. https://scholarworks.iu.edu/journals/index.php/josotl/article/view/2150assessmentpsychologystudent misconceptions
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Annette Taylor
Patricia Kowalski
spellingShingle Annette Taylor
Patricia Kowalski
Students’ Misconceptions in Psychology: How You Ask Matters…Sometimes
Journal of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning
assessment
psychology
student misconceptions
author_facet Annette Taylor
Patricia Kowalski
author_sort Annette Taylor
title Students’ Misconceptions in Psychology: How You Ask Matters…Sometimes
title_short Students’ Misconceptions in Psychology: How You Ask Matters…Sometimes
title_full Students’ Misconceptions in Psychology: How You Ask Matters…Sometimes
title_fullStr Students’ Misconceptions in Psychology: How You Ask Matters…Sometimes
title_full_unstemmed Students’ Misconceptions in Psychology: How You Ask Matters…Sometimes
title_sort students’ misconceptions in psychology: how you ask matters…sometimes
publisher Indiana University Office of Scholarly Publishing
series Journal of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning
issn 1527-9316
publishDate 2012-09-01
description Misconceptions about psychology are prevalent among introductory students. Just how prevalent and what can be done to change these misconceptions depends on valid methods of assessment. The most common method of assessment, the true/false questionnaire, is problematic.  The present study compared true/false with forced choice formats to determine whether the formats give different estimates of student misconceptions. Introductory psychology students (N = 165) answered 39 misconceptions in both the true/false and forced choice formats.  Students differed in accuracy when assessed with the different formats, with 33.05% accuracy for true/false and 41.29% accuracy for forced choice.  In the analyses of individual items we observed that some items did not differ in level of accuracy across formats and other items did differ.  We conclude that the true/false method of assessing misconceptions may overestimate students’ level of misconception and recommend continued attention to how researchers assess misconceptions.
topic assessment
psychology
student misconceptions
url https://scholarworks.iu.edu/journals/index.php/josotl/article/view/2150
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