Analysing the distribution of questions in the gas law chapters of secondary and introductory college chemistry textbooks from the United States

2014 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
pp. 787-799 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gabriel Gillette ◽  
Michael J. Sanger

This study analysed the distribution of questions from the gas law chapters of four high school and four college chemistry textbooks based on six variables—Book Type (secondaryversusintroductory college), Cognitive Skill (lower-orderversushigher-order), Question Format (calculationversusmultiple-choiceversusshort-answer), Question Placement (in-chapterversusend-of-chapterversustest-bank), Question Type (qualitativeversusquantitative), and Representation (macroscopicversusparticulateversussymbolic). The questions in these chapters were homogeneously distributed for the Cognitive Skill and the Representation variables, but showed differences in question distribution based on the Book Type, Question Format, Question Placement, and Question Type variables. The loglinear analysis method used in this study provides one way to analyse the distribution of different types of questions appearing in chemistry textbooks, and these differences in question distribution can be helpful for textbook authors to evaluate the types of questions appearing in their textbooks and how they are presented, and can be helpful for chemistry instructors to determine how they need to adapt their instructional lessons to prepare students for course examinations or college/career placement examinations.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carrie Shandra

Internships have become a ubiquitous component of the college-career transition, yet empirical evidence of the internship market is limited. This study uses data from 1.3 million internship postings collected between 2007-2016 in the United States to (1) identify trends in internship education, experience, and skill requirements over the Great Recession and recovery periods; (2) evaluate how these trends correspond to those observed in the traditional labor market; and (3) assess robustness across labor market sectors. Results indicate that internship education and skill requirements increased substantially throughout the recession and recovery periods, indicative of a longer-term structural shift in employer expectations about internship hiring. Additionally, growth in internship education and skill requirements largely outpaced growth in non-internship education and skill requirements over the same period, suggesting potential substitution of non-interns with interns. Post-recession employers still consider internships to be entry-level positions—yet now expect interns to have skills in hand.


2007 ◽  
Vol 84 (2) ◽  
pp. 248 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kenneth W. Lux ◽  
Matthew J. D'Amato ◽  
Barbara Anderegg ◽  
Kenneth A. Walz ◽  
Holly Walter Kerby

2018 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
pp. 1270-1286 ◽  
Author(s):  
James Ross ◽  
Leslie Nuñez ◽  
Chinh Chu Lai

Students’ decisions to enter or persist in STEM courses is linked with their affective domain. The influence of factors impacting students’ affective domain in introductory college chemistry classes, such as attitude, is often overlooked by instructors, who instead focus on students’ mathematical abilities as sole predictors of academic achievement. The current academic barrier to enrollment in introductory college chemistry classes is typically a passing grade in a mathematics prerequisite class. However, mathematical ability is only a piece of the puzzle in predicting preparedness for college chemistry. Herein, students’ attitude toward the subject of chemistry was measured using the original Attitudes toward the Subject of Chemistry Inventory (ASCI). Partial least squares structural equation modeling (PLS-SEM) was used to chart and monitor the development of students’ attitude toward the subject of chemistry during an introductory college chemistry course. Results from PLS-SEM support a 3-factor (intellectual accessibility,emotional satisfaction, andinterestandutility) structure, which could signal the distinct cognitive, affective, and behavioral components of attitude, according to its theoretical tripartite framework. Evidence of a low-involvement hierarchy of attitude effect is also presented herein. This study provides a pathway for instructors to identify at-risk students, exhibiting low affective characteristics, early in a course so that academic interventions are feasible. The results presented here have implications for the design and implementation of teaching strategies geared toward optimizing student achievement in introductory college chemistry.


Author(s):  
Beatriz Fevereiro ◽  
Fernando Rafael Gonçalves ◽  
Beatriz Torres-Guimarães ◽  
Diogo Francisco Tomaz ◽  
Ana Clara Vasconcelos-Oliveira ◽  
...  

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