Journal of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (Feb 2015)

Attitude to the study of chemistry and its relationship with achievement in an introductory undergraduate course

  • Stephen J Brown,
  • Sue White,
  • Bibhya Sharma,
  • Lara Wakeling,
  • Mani Naiker,
  • Shaneel Chandra,
  • Romila Gopalan,
  • Veena Bilimoria

DOI
https://doi.org/10.14434/josotl.v15i2.13283
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 2

Abstract

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A positive attitude to a subject may be congruent with higher achievement; however, limited evidence supports this for students in undergraduate chemistry – this may result from difficulties in quantifying attitude. Therefore, in this study, the Attitude to the Study of Chemistry Inventory (ASCI) – a validated instrument to quantify attitude, was used to measure attitude to chemistry in 125 undergraduates studying an introductory course in chemistry, as part of a BSc Chemistry major. The 13 week course contained 4 summative assessments: practical (PRAC), tutorial (TUT), on-line web-based learning (OWL), and a final exam (FE). Sub-scales within ASCI which quantify the ‘affective’ and ‘cognitive’ components of attitude were determined. Firstly, for all 125 students, weak correlations (r) between the affective scale score and FE (r=0.275, P

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