Making test anxiety a laughing matter| A quantitative study

<p> Relieving test anxiety actions range from relaxation exercises to prescription medication. Humor can be a simple method of test anxiety relief. The current study was used to determine if humor, in the form of a cartoon, placed on the splash page of an online exam improved the test scores o...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Repass, Jim T.
Language:EN
Published: Keiser University 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10261256
id ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-10261256
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-102612562017-04-06T16:19:20Z Making test anxiety a laughing matter| A quantitative study Repass, Jim T. Educational tests & measurements <p> Relieving test anxiety actions range from relaxation exercises to prescription medication. Humor can be a simple method of test anxiety relief. The current study was used to determine if humor, in the form of a cartoon, placed on the splash page of an online exam improved the test scores of students who have high test anxiety. In the current study, 2 theories were used to guide the research. The interference theory by Ralf Schwarzer and Matthias Jerusalem indicated students have difficulty separating competing thoughts during an exam. In the adult learning theory by Malcolm Knowles, the learning of children and adults was differentiated, while explaining how adults learn. A quasi-experimental quantitative design was used to find a possible correlation between humor and test anxiety relief. The study sample comprised an equal number of students with high test anxiety and students with low test anxiety. The low test anxiety group comprised the control group. A 2-sample <i>t</i> test was used to search for a correlation between the cartoon and the exam scores. Intended benefits of the study included: (a) students with test anxiety find relief from test anxiety, (b) instructors achieve reliable assessments of students with test anxiety, and (c) confident, well-educated graduates. The current study results showed the opposite of expected results. The high test anxiety group did worse on the exam with the cartoon. The 2-sample <i> t</i> test showed a negative improvement of &ndash;6.222 between midterm and final exams for the high test anxiety group.</p> Keiser University 2017-04-04 00:00:00.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10261256 EN
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Educational tests & measurements
spellingShingle Educational tests & measurements
Repass, Jim T.
Making test anxiety a laughing matter| A quantitative study
description <p> Relieving test anxiety actions range from relaxation exercises to prescription medication. Humor can be a simple method of test anxiety relief. The current study was used to determine if humor, in the form of a cartoon, placed on the splash page of an online exam improved the test scores of students who have high test anxiety. In the current study, 2 theories were used to guide the research. The interference theory by Ralf Schwarzer and Matthias Jerusalem indicated students have difficulty separating competing thoughts during an exam. In the adult learning theory by Malcolm Knowles, the learning of children and adults was differentiated, while explaining how adults learn. A quasi-experimental quantitative design was used to find a possible correlation between humor and test anxiety relief. The study sample comprised an equal number of students with high test anxiety and students with low test anxiety. The low test anxiety group comprised the control group. A 2-sample <i>t</i> test was used to search for a correlation between the cartoon and the exam scores. Intended benefits of the study included: (a) students with test anxiety find relief from test anxiety, (b) instructors achieve reliable assessments of students with test anxiety, and (c) confident, well-educated graduates. The current study results showed the opposite of expected results. The high test anxiety group did worse on the exam with the cartoon. The 2-sample <i> t</i> test showed a negative improvement of &ndash;6.222 between midterm and final exams for the high test anxiety group.</p>
author Repass, Jim T.
author_facet Repass, Jim T.
author_sort Repass, Jim T.
title Making test anxiety a laughing matter| A quantitative study
title_short Making test anxiety a laughing matter| A quantitative study
title_full Making test anxiety a laughing matter| A quantitative study
title_fullStr Making test anxiety a laughing matter| A quantitative study
title_full_unstemmed Making test anxiety a laughing matter| A quantitative study
title_sort making test anxiety a laughing matter| a quantitative study
publisher Keiser University
publishDate 2017
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10261256
work_keys_str_mv AT repassjimt makingtestanxietyalaughingmatteraquantitativestudy
_version_ 1718436202751721472