Document Type
Dissertation
Degree
Doctor of Education (EdD)
Major/Program
Higher Education
First Advisor's Name
Leonard B. Bliss
First Advisor's Committee Title
Committee Chair
Second Advisor's Name
Janice R. Sandiford
Third Advisor's Name
Cengiz Alacaci
Fourth Advisor's Name
Dawn Addy
Date of Defense
3-28-2007
Abstract
The purpose of this study was twofold. It was designed to determine (a) the efficacy of an intervention designed to increase the frequencies of appropriate study behaviors on the part of community college students who were preparing for academic mathematics activities and (b) whether any increase in appropriate study behavior frequency was accompanied by increased academic achievement in college preparatory mathematics classes.
A total of 126 Miami Dade College students participated in this study. Two developmental (remedial) mathematics classes were randomly assigned as the experimental group, and two others were assigned as the control group. All students also took a College Survival (SLS) class. The Study Behavior Inventory (SBI) and the Computerized Placement Test (CPT) were administered to the four classes. The SBI was used as a pre- and post-test. The SLS curriculum and classroom time were the same for both groups. However, students in the treatment groups received instruction designed to increase the frequency of effective study behaviors associated with the three factors identified in the SBI, while the students in the control group participated in activities that did not emphasize study behaviors.
A series of analysis of covariance procedures were used to analyze four hypotheses. The first three hypotheses proposed that students who were instructed in the use of appropriate study behaviors would score higher on the three factors of the Study Behavior Inventory than those who were not. The fourth hypothesis proposed that a greater proportion of mathematics students who were instructed in the use of appropriate study behaviors would receive a passing grade in their course than students who were in the control group. The four hypotheses were tested at the .05 level of significance.
This study revealed that students who received instruction in appropriate study behaviors scored higher in the use of appropriate study behaviors and in mathematics achievement than students who did not. Additional research is needed to investigate whether these effects would persist over time, or be found in subjects other than mathematics.
Identifier
FI14061556
Recommended Citation
Cuesta, Zoraya Maria, "The effect of instruction on the study behaviors and academic achievement of community college students" (2007). FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations. 2680.
https://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/2680
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