The effects of a trade book on attitudes and achievement in social studies
The purpose of the study was to determine if social studies achievement and positive attitudes about social studies would increase when the traditional single textbook approach was supplemented by a related work of children's literature. Two intact classes were randomly assigned to the treatmen...
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ndltd-BSU-oai-cardinalscholar.bsu.edu-handle-1811662014-07-23T03:32:38ZThe effects of a trade book on attitudes and achievement in social studiesSteury, Cynthia L.Social sciences -- Study and teaching (Elementary)Interdisciplinary approach in education.Language arts -- Correlation with content subjects.The purpose of the study was to determine if social studies achievement and positive attitudes about social studies would increase when the traditional single textbook approach was supplemented by a related work of children's literature. Two intact classes were randomly assigned to the treatment group which received instruction based on the regularly adopted textbook and the trade book My Brother Sam Is Dead, by James Lincoln Collier and Christopher Collier. Two randomly assigned classes composed the control group and received instruction based on the textbook only.The participants in the study were filth grade students at an urban magnet school. Each of two teachers served as instructors working with one control class and one treatment class. The instruments used were the Attitudes Toward Social Studies instrument and the Macmillan test written for the unit of instruction entitled The Colonies Become a Nation. Pretests and posttests were administered to students in each group to assess differences in mean gain scores between groups in both attitude and achievement. In order to determine if the difference between mean gains between the two groups was significant, t-tests were used. An analysis of variance and the Tukey HSD multiple comparison procedure were used to determine how the four sections differed in attitude toward social studies and which differences were significant.There was no significant difference in mean social studies achievement gains between the treatment group and the control group. A significant difference in mean attitude gains between control and treatment groups was found. The results of the t test showed a significant mean gain in positive attitudes about social studies favoring the control group. Evidence from the analysis of variance and the Tukey HSD multiple comparison procedure indicated that the positive attitude gain was linked to the Hawthorne Effect.Department of Elementary EducationStroud, James C.2011-06-03T19:31:33Z2011-06-03T19:31:33Z19961996viii, 182 leaves ; 28 cm.LD2489.Z64 1996 .S74http://cardinalscholar.bsu.edu/handle/handle/181166http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/1041809Virtual Press |
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Social sciences -- Study and teaching (Elementary) Interdisciplinary approach in education. Language arts -- Correlation with content subjects. |
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Social sciences -- Study and teaching (Elementary) Interdisciplinary approach in education. Language arts -- Correlation with content subjects. Steury, Cynthia L. The effects of a trade book on attitudes and achievement in social studies |
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The purpose of the study was to determine if social studies achievement and positive attitudes about social studies would increase when the traditional single textbook approach was supplemented by a related work of children's literature. Two intact classes were randomly assigned to the treatment group which received instruction based on the regularly adopted textbook and the trade book My Brother Sam Is Dead, by James Lincoln Collier and Christopher Collier. Two randomly assigned classes composed the control group and received instruction based on the textbook only.The participants in the study were filth grade students at an urban magnet school. Each of two teachers served as instructors working with one control class and one treatment class. The instruments used were the Attitudes Toward Social Studies instrument and the Macmillan test written for the unit of instruction entitled The Colonies Become a Nation. Pretests and posttests were administered to students in each group to assess differences in mean gain scores between groups in both attitude and achievement. In order to determine if the difference between mean gains between the two groups was significant, t-tests were used. An analysis of variance and the Tukey HSD multiple comparison procedure were used to determine how the four sections differed in attitude toward social studies and which differences were significant.There was no significant difference in mean social studies achievement gains between the treatment group and the control group. A significant difference in mean attitude gains between control and treatment groups was found. The results of the t test showed a significant mean gain in positive attitudes about social studies favoring the control group. Evidence from the analysis of variance and the Tukey HSD multiple comparison procedure indicated that the positive attitude gain was linked to the Hawthorne Effect. === Department of Elementary Education |
author2 |
Stroud, James C. |
author_facet |
Stroud, James C. Steury, Cynthia L. |
author |
Steury, Cynthia L. |
author_sort |
Steury, Cynthia L. |
title |
The effects of a trade book on attitudes and achievement in social studies |
title_short |
The effects of a trade book on attitudes and achievement in social studies |
title_full |
The effects of a trade book on attitudes and achievement in social studies |
title_fullStr |
The effects of a trade book on attitudes and achievement in social studies |
title_full_unstemmed |
The effects of a trade book on attitudes and achievement in social studies |
title_sort |
effects of a trade book on attitudes and achievement in social studies |
publishDate |
2011 |
url |
http://cardinalscholar.bsu.edu/handle/handle/181166 http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/1041809 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT steurycynthial theeffectsofatradebookonattitudesandachievementinsocialstudies AT steurycynthial effectsofatradebookonattitudesandachievementinsocialstudies |
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1716708916265484288 |