Abstract

The concept of active learning as a superior mode of instruction has recently received great attention in the education research literature. It holds promise of steering students away from rote memorization towards higher order thinking. However, few studies focus on student perceptions of higher order thinking activities and diverse student voices are all but absent in this regard. This study applies a combined approach of exploratory qualitative and supplementary quantitative analysis to address this gap. We examined perceptions of underrepresented and non-underrepresented students regarding their engagement in active learning to foster higher order thinking. The study was set within a large enrollment (198 students), undergraduate course in the area of science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM). The study sample comprised of 33 purposefully selected, ethnically and racially diverse students. Data sources included class attendance/participation, graded activity assignments, and a perception survey. Class attendance and graded assignments were used to triangulate responses on the perception surveys. The Generic Inductive Approach supported our qualitative analysis. Quantitative data were analyzed via two-way ANOVA, non-parametric Mann-Whitney Test (when assumptions did not hold) and simple linear regression. Findings include three themes that cut across groups; participants perceived their higher order thinking skills improved, that there were benefits and challenges to active learning and a fear of failing the course. Quantitative data from the active learning activities and attendance supported similar engagement and achievement in higher order thinking activities across race/ethnicity groups as differences failed to reach the a priori established significance threshold. This study extends the knowledge on active learning and demonstrates that it was possible to engage underrepresented and non-underrepresented students equally and effectively in higher order thinking actives in large enrollment courses and that students perceived this as beneficial.

Highlights

  • The dreams, possibilities, and necessity of public education extends beyond K-12 systems

  • Educators must provide high quality and meaningful education to all students. This includes using research supported strategies that support the academic achievement of students typically underrepresented in higher education with diverse backgrounds. This study acknowledges this charge by examining student perceptions of their engagement in active learning activities that support higher order thinking (as defined by Bloom’s taxonomy revised, (Anderson et al, 2001) within a large enrollment undergraduate course in the area of science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM)

  • This exploratory mixed-methods study showed that across the three race/ethnicity groups, all students perceived that their higher order thinking improved, perceived both benefits and challenges of active learning in large enrollment courses and that throughout the process, they had a fear of failing

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Summary

Introduction

The dreams, possibilities, and necessity of public education extends beyond K-12 systems. Educators must provide high quality and meaningful education to all students This includes using research supported strategies that support the academic achievement of students typically underrepresented in higher education with diverse backgrounds. This study acknowledges this charge by examining student perceptions of their engagement in active learning activities that support higher order thinking (as defined by Bloom’s taxonomy revised, (Anderson et al, 2001) within a large enrollment undergraduate course in the area of science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM). This study examines student perceptions of their engagement in active learning within a large enrollment undergraduate course in a STEM course

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