20090529

Education research: SPCI gains (Cuesta College, Spring Semester 2009)

The Star Properties Concept Inventory (SPCI, developed by Janelle Bailey, University of Nevada-Las Vegas) was administered to Astronomy 210 (one-semester introductory astronomy) students at Cuesta College, San Luis Obispo, CA during the last week of instruction, at both the main San Luis Obispo campus and the North County campus at Paso Robles.
     Cuesta College    Cuesta College
Astronomy 210 Astronomy 210
SLO campus NC campus
Spring Semester Spring Semester
2009 2009
N 56 students* 29 students*
low 5 7
mean 11.0 +/- 3.1 11.7 +/- 2.9
high 18 16
*Excludes students with negative informed consent forms (*.pdf), the use of which is discussed in a previous post.

A "Student" t-test of the null hypothesis results in p = 0.33, thus there is no significant difference between post-test scores at these two Cuesta College campuses. Similarly, the t-test of pre-test scores from both campuses was p = 0.28, which was not significant.

The averages for each section of the initial and final SPCI scores (given as percentages, with standard deviations), as well as the Hake normalized gain <g> are given below:
Astronomy 210 Spring Semester 2009 section 30676 (SLO campus)
<initial%> = 30% +/- 14% (N = 64)
<final%> = 48% +/- 13% (N = 56)
<g> = 0.24 +/- 0.18 (51 matched-pairs); 0.25 (class-wise)

Astronomy 210 Spring Semester 2009 section 30674 (NC campus)
<initial%> = 28% +/- 13% (N = 41)
<final%> = 51% +/- 13% (N = 29)
<g> = 0.34 +/- 0.19 (28 matched-pairs); 0.32 (class-wise)
For the NC campus, this Hake gain is greater than previous gains for introductory astronomy classes, as discussed in previous posts on this blog. However, the "Student" t-test of the null hypothesis results in p = 0.41, thus there is no significant difference between matched-pair gains at these two Cuesta College campuses.

Notable about Astronomy 210 classes at Cuesta College from Fall 2008 semester onwards is not just the mere implementation of electronic response system "clickers" (Classroom Performance System, einstruction.com), but the use of known best practices of using clickers (i.e., "think-(pair)-share"), from current education research. More analysis on the impact of using clickers on this introductory astronomy class will be forthcoming on this blog.

For earlier results at Cuesta College and further discussion of the SPCI, see previous posts:
Education research: SPCI gains (Cuesta College, Spring Semester 2006-Spring Semester 2007).
Education research: SPCI gains (Cuesta College, Summer Session 2007).
Education research: SPCI gains (Cuesta College, Fall Semester 2007).
Education research: SPCI gains (Cuesta College, Spring Semester 2008).
Education research: SPCI gains (Cuesta College, Fall Semester 2008).

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