Posts tagged ‘research’

August 17, 2011

Romantic thoughts kill STEM ambition in college women

by Grace

The journal Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin is about to publish a series of research projects … that suggest that when college-age women think about romance, they become less interested in studying STEM fields. College-age men, however, can get interested in romance without any impact on their engagement with math and science.

The research, conducted by Lora Park at the State University of New York at Buffalo, may offer insight into the gender gap in STEM fields.

Another area of research she is pursuing may or may not be helpful to her efforts, Park said. Since the assumptions of many women appear to be that men find female STEM success unattractive, she hopes to find out whether this is in fact the case.

I’ll stay tuned for that.  From personal experience, I know some men find STEM success very attractive.

Romance vs. STEM – InsideHigherEd, August 16, 2011

June 14, 2011

Problems with study that claims groups are better than lectures for learning

by Grace

Last month the NY Times reported on a study that showed interactive group instruction is superior to traditional lectures.

In one of the initiative’s most visible studies, Dr. Wieman’s team reports that students in an introductory college physics course did especially well on an exam after attending experimental, collaborative classes during the 12th week of the course. By contrast, students taking the same course from another instructor — who did not use the experimental approach and continued with lectures as usual — scored much lower on the same exam.

Not so fast.

Yet experts who reviewed the new report cautioned that it was not convincing enough to change teaching. The study has a variety of limitations, they said, some because of the difficulty of doing research in the dude-I-slept-through-class world of the freshman year of college, and others because of the study’s design. “The whole issue of how to draw on basic science and apply it in classrooms is a whole lot more complicated than they’re letting on,” said Daniel Willingham, a psychology professor at the University of Virginia.

Dr. Willingham said that, among other concerns, the study was not controlled enough to tell which of the changes in teaching might have accounted for the difference in students’ scores.

Here are Dr. Willingham’s candid comments from his Facebook page.

There were a lot of problems with this study. The two methods compared were each tested in just ONE classroom–so no way of knowing whether the observed effects were just due to the teacher. The “group learning” condition was taught by a new teacher–the “lecture” was the same professor as had been teaching all semester. The critical test was opt-in, and lots of students decided not to take it–and the proportions were unequal across conditions. The study was a mess. I can’t imagine why Science published it….

Studies like this are fine for what they are–they are really more pilot studies, or they could be useful as qualitative research. (I think qualitative research *is* really quite useful.) But it didn’t have the strengths of qualitative research and was pitched as a quantitative study.

Other reports about this study:

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