Assessment of Predictive Power of the Felder & Silverman Learning Styles Model on Students' Performance in an Introductory Physics Course

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Bibliographic Details
Title: Assessment of Predictive Power of the Felder & Silverman Learning Styles Model on Students' Performance in an Introductory Physics Course
Language: English
Authors: Caceffo, Ricardo, Valle, Eduardo, Mesquita, Rickson, Azevedo, Rodolfo
Source: European Journal of Physics Education. 2019 10(2):1-22.
Availability: Erciyes University. Melikgazi, Kayseri, 38039 Turkey. Tel: +90-352-207-6666; Web site: http://www.eu-journal.org/index.php/EJPE
Peer Reviewed: Y
Page Count: 22
Publication Date: 2019
Document Type: Journal Articles
Reports - Research
Education Level: Higher Education
Postsecondary Education
Descriptors: Prediction, Cognitive Style, Models, Science Achievement, Introductory Courses, Physics, Classification, Individual Differences, Preferences, Graduate Students, Identification
ISSN: 1309-7202
Abstract: According to the Felder and Silverman Learning Styles Model (FSM), students have learning preferences regarding how information is obtained, processed, perceived and understood. The Index of Learning Styles (ILS) is an online questionnaire created by Felder and Soloman to classify students according to their learning styles. With a priori knowledge of students' learning styles, one might hypothesize that the instructor could adapt his/her class to support, and even improve, students' learning. Still, one question that remains open is whether it is possible to individualize the FSM, i.e., if students of determined learning styles perform different (better or worse) on questions mapped to different styles. In this work, we assessed the correlation between students' performance and their learning styles in an Introductory Physics course. We designed a Learning Styles Classification Method (LSCM) and implemented it online (LSQuiz) to predict individual students' performance on pre-class questionnaires (N = 63). We found that, in general, the ability of the ILS to predict individual student performance on pre-class questionnaires was not better than random, with no significant correlation between students' performance and their learning styles, indicated by a Pearson's correlation coefficient of 0.54. Nevertheless, when independently analyzing the learning styles dimensions, we have identified heterogeneous data between the dimensions, with a greater correlation in the Sequential-Global dimension, with a 0.76 coefficient, followed by a coefficient of 0.50 in the Visual-Verbal and 0.35 in the Sensory Intuitive. We found, however, that the results related to the Sequential-Global dimension are not supported by the internal consistency of that dimension in the ILS (Cronbach's alpha of 0.30). We conclude suggesting that the adoption of customized learning practices in the Visual-Verbal dimension have potential and could be the focus of further studies.
Abstractor: As Provided
Entry Date: 2019
Accession Number: EJ1231166
Database: ERIC
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