Abstract

This study examines the effects of gender on class attendance, the performance in laboratory experiments and the overall course performance of undergraduate engineering students in an Electronic Fundamentals 1 course during semester 1 of 2018 at a public university in South Africa. Data was collected through documentation of: class attendance (for each student at each class lesson); the performance scores in four (4) laboratory experiments and a laboratory experiment test; and the overall course performance score. The overall course performance score constitutes of 50 % from a summative assessment and the other 50 % formed of formative components as follows: 25 % of class test 1, 40 % of class test 2 and 35 % of the overall laboratory experiment performance score. The independent samples t-test results revealed that there is no statistically significant effect of gender on: class attendance (t(174.46) = −0.958, p (= 0.339) > 0.05); overall laboratory experiments performance (t(229) = 0.565, p (= 0.573) > 0.05) and overall course performance (t(229) = −1.805, p (= 0.072) > 0.05).

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call