Relationships Among Personal Characteristics, Self-Efficacy, and Conceptual Knowledge of Circuit Analysis of Community College Engineering Students

abstract: Conceptual knowledge and self-efficacy are two research topics that are well-established at universities, however very little has been investigated about these at the community college. A sample of thirty-seven students enrolled in three introductory circuit analysis classes at a large sou...

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Other Authors: Whitesel, Carl (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.25178
id ndltd-asu.edu-item-25178
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-251782018-06-22T03:05:15Z Relationships Among Personal Characteristics, Self-Efficacy, and Conceptual Knowledge of Circuit Analysis of Community College Engineering Students abstract: Conceptual knowledge and self-efficacy are two research topics that are well-established at universities, however very little has been investigated about these at the community college. A sample of thirty-seven students enrolled in three introductory circuit analysis classes at a large southwestern community college was used to answer questions about conceptual knowledge and self-efficacy of community college engineering students. Measures included a demographic survey and a pre/post three-tiered concept inventory to evaluate student conceptual knowledge of basic DC circuit analysis and self-efficacy for circuit analysis. A group effect was present in the data, so descriptive statistics were used to investigate the relationships among students' personal and academic characteristics and conceptual knowledge of circuit analysis. The a priori attribute approach was used to qualitatively investigate misconceptions students have for circuit analysis. The results suggest that students who take more credit hours score higher on a test of conceptual knowledge of circuit analysis, however additional research is required to confirm this, due to the group effect. No new misconceptions were identified. In addition to these, one group of students received more time to practice using the concepts. Consequently, that group scored higher on the concept inventory, possibly indicating that students who have extra practice time may score higher on a test of conceptual knowledge of circuit analysis. Correlation analysis was used to identify relationships among students' personal and academic characteristics and self-efficacy for circuit analysis, as well as to investigate the relationship between self-efficacy for circuit analysis and conceptual knowledge of circuit analysis. Subject's father's education level was found to be inversely correlated with self-efficacy for circuit analysis, and subject's age was found to be directly correlated with self-efficacy for circuit analysis. Finally, self-efficacy for circuit analysis was found to be positively correlated with conceptual knowledge of circuit analysis. Dissertation/Thesis Whitesel, Carl (Author) Baker, Dale R. (Advisor) Reisslein, Martin (Committee member) Carberry, Adam (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Community college education Circuit Analysis Community College Conceptual Knowledge Self-Efficacy eng 178 pages Ph.D. Curriculum and Instruction 2014 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.25178 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2014
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Community college education
Circuit Analysis
Community College
Conceptual Knowledge
Self-Efficacy
spellingShingle Community college education
Circuit Analysis
Community College
Conceptual Knowledge
Self-Efficacy
Relationships Among Personal Characteristics, Self-Efficacy, and Conceptual Knowledge of Circuit Analysis of Community College Engineering Students
description abstract: Conceptual knowledge and self-efficacy are two research topics that are well-established at universities, however very little has been investigated about these at the community college. A sample of thirty-seven students enrolled in three introductory circuit analysis classes at a large southwestern community college was used to answer questions about conceptual knowledge and self-efficacy of community college engineering students. Measures included a demographic survey and a pre/post three-tiered concept inventory to evaluate student conceptual knowledge of basic DC circuit analysis and self-efficacy for circuit analysis. A group effect was present in the data, so descriptive statistics were used to investigate the relationships among students' personal and academic characteristics and conceptual knowledge of circuit analysis. The a priori attribute approach was used to qualitatively investigate misconceptions students have for circuit analysis. The results suggest that students who take more credit hours score higher on a test of conceptual knowledge of circuit analysis, however additional research is required to confirm this, due to the group effect. No new misconceptions were identified. In addition to these, one group of students received more time to practice using the concepts. Consequently, that group scored higher on the concept inventory, possibly indicating that students who have extra practice time may score higher on a test of conceptual knowledge of circuit analysis. Correlation analysis was used to identify relationships among students' personal and academic characteristics and self-efficacy for circuit analysis, as well as to investigate the relationship between self-efficacy for circuit analysis and conceptual knowledge of circuit analysis. Subject's father's education level was found to be inversely correlated with self-efficacy for circuit analysis, and subject's age was found to be directly correlated with self-efficacy for circuit analysis. Finally, self-efficacy for circuit analysis was found to be positively correlated with conceptual knowledge of circuit analysis. === Dissertation/Thesis === Ph.D. Curriculum and Instruction 2014
author2 Whitesel, Carl (Author)
author_facet Whitesel, Carl (Author)
title Relationships Among Personal Characteristics, Self-Efficacy, and Conceptual Knowledge of Circuit Analysis of Community College Engineering Students
title_short Relationships Among Personal Characteristics, Self-Efficacy, and Conceptual Knowledge of Circuit Analysis of Community College Engineering Students
title_full Relationships Among Personal Characteristics, Self-Efficacy, and Conceptual Knowledge of Circuit Analysis of Community College Engineering Students
title_fullStr Relationships Among Personal Characteristics, Self-Efficacy, and Conceptual Knowledge of Circuit Analysis of Community College Engineering Students
title_full_unstemmed Relationships Among Personal Characteristics, Self-Efficacy, and Conceptual Knowledge of Circuit Analysis of Community College Engineering Students
title_sort relationships among personal characteristics, self-efficacy, and conceptual knowledge of circuit analysis of community college engineering students
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.25178
_version_ 1718700462805352448