Abstract

Allowing students to voluntarily ask and answer questions in front of the whole class are common teaching practices used in college science courses. However, few studies have examined college science students’ perceptions of these practices, the extent to which students choose to engage in these practices, and what discourages students from participating. In this study, we surveyed 417 undergraduates at a research-intensive institution about their experiences asking and answering questions in large-enrollment college science courses. Specifically, students answered questions about to what extent they perceive voluntarily asking and answering questions in large-enrollment science courses is helpful to them and why. They also answered questions about to what extent they engage in asking and answering questions in large-enrollment college science courses and what factors could discourage them from participating. Using binary logistic regression, we examined whether there were differences among students of different demographic groups regarding their opinions about asking and answering questions. We found that overwhelmingly students reported that other students voluntarily asking and answering instructor questions is helpful to them. Notably, compared to continuing generation students, first-generation students were more likely to perceive other students asking questions to be helpful. Despite perceiving asking and answering questions to be helpful, over half of students reported that they never ask or answer questions in large-enrollment college science courses during a semester, and women were more likely than men to report never asking questions. We identified fear of negative evaluation, or students’ sense of dread associated with being unfavorably evaluated, as a primary factor influencing their decision to answer instructor questions. This work adds to a growing body of literature on student participation in large-enrollment college science courses and begins to uncover underlying factors influencing student participation.

Highlights

  • Eliciting student participation by giving students the opportunity to ask or answer questions in front of the whole class is a common way for instructors to engage students in the college science classroom [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8]

  • This study was conducted as part of a semester long course-based undergraduate research experience (CURE) taught by K.M.C. at the University of Central Florida in spring 2020

  • The CURE was offered by the Department of Biology and was backward designed to improve students’ process of science and quantitative reasoning skills [46,47]

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Summary

Introduction

Eliciting student participation by giving students the opportunity to ask or answer questions in front of the whole class is a common way for instructors to engage students in the college science classroom [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8]. Despite the near ubiquitous nature of giving students the opportunity to voluntarily ask and answer questions in front of the class, there are few studies that have examined the benefits of this type of participation in the context of college science courses. In the context of college science courses, students who voluntarily participated in a large-enrollment discussion-style chemistry course showed greater learning gains on a chemistry concept inventory compared to those who did not frequently participate [7]. College students across disciplines report that giving students the opportunity to participate during class can create the feeling of a comforting, warm classroom environment, one in which students feel as though the instructor cares and that they have a perceived relationship with the instructor [14,21,22,23,24,25]

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