International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (May 2024)

Overcoming the Bottlenecks in Teaching Psychological Statistics

  • Lisa Elliott,
  • Joan Middendorf

DOI
https://doi.org/10.20429/ijsotl.2024.180112
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 1

Abstract

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Teaching and learning undergraduate statistics has been a most challenging task for undergraduate psychology majors (Salkind, 2017). A seasoned statistics instructor consulted with a seasoned instructional designer on a method to improve a particularly demanding course using a performance improvement approach to address learning difficulties she had noted in previous semesters. The Decoding the Disciplines methodology identified the most challenging concepts and provided a methodology to improve student learning performance. The methodology focused on five core concepts in psychological statistics: probability, variability, central limit theorem, independent/ dependent variables, and degrees of freedom. The Decoding the Disciplines curriculum was used for three semesters. In these three semesters, performance was compared pre and post on these concepts within the semester. Repeated measures t-tests found a significant change in the percentage of correct answers between the pretest and the final exam on the five core concepts.

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