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In search of engagement: Describing the drivers of secondary student science engagement in the United States and Finland Justin Bruner Michigan State University
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Outline Background and Research Questions Defining Engagement Using Flow Theory Methods Experience Sampling Methods Data and analysis Between Country Differences Correlations T-Test of between country difference Conclusion
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Background Much of the international comparative policy discussions have focused on two main themes: Access MDG and EFA CCT programs But what happens when kids get to school? Achievement PISA, PIRLS, TIMSS But there is more to learning than just a test score… This work will focus on engagement with an emphasis on science classes
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Research Questions What is driving student engagement in United States and Finnish classrooms? What are the differences in engagement between United States and Finnish students? Out of School? In school? In Science?
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Defining Engagement Using Flow Theory Flow Theory (Csikszentmihalyi, 1990) Applies to many domains of life “Time flies by” Try to capture the elements that lead to a flow state or the “optimal experience” Increased feelings of challenge and skills in the task “Challenge of activity” “Your skills in the activity” Low to High (4 point) Source: Csikszentmihalyi, 1990
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Defining Engagement Also add Interest Adapt Flow for school settings (Shernoff et al., 2003) Increased feelings of interest in the task –Concentration and Affect also a part of their model »Did not ask these “Is this activity interesting?” –Not at all to very much (4 point) Therefore a student is considered engaged when they show increased levels of challenge, skill, and interest Lab example of our student How this scales up from student to teacher/classroom to school to country
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Experience Sampling Method (ESM) Capture daily routines and changes on an individual level Random signaling to avoid “stacking the deck” Scheduled science response Make sure at least one science observation per day Creates a nested data structure of responses within students Need more power for classrooms, schools, subjects
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Table 1 - Descriptive Statistics United States Within country percentFinland Within Country PercentTotal Number Students147112259 Number Beeps495434438397 Out School Beeps178636%195957%3745 In School Beeps316864%148443%4652 Science Beeps56511%57617%1141 Total Engaged Beep66515%51015%1175 Total Engage Out-Sch Beep22513%23612%461 Total Engage In-Sch Beep44014%27318%713 Total Engage Sci Beep6211%12422%186
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Table 2 – Correlations with Engagement PartialSemipartPartial2Semipart2SigN US All Challenge0.4710.4330.2220.1880***4422 Skill0.3150.2690.0990.0720***4422 Interest0.2770.2330.0770.0550***4422 Finland All Challenge0.3950.3550.1560.1260***3325 Skill0.2640.2260.0700.0510***3325 Interest0.3120.2710.0970.0730***3325 US Out School Challenge0.5410.5060.2930.2560***1588 Skill0.2750.2250.0760.0500***1588 Interest0.2320.1880.0540.0350***1588 Finland Out School Challenge0.4580.4210.2100.1770***1882 Skill0.1980.1650.0390.0270***1882 Interest0.2780.2370.0780.0560***1882 US In School Challenge0.4350.3950.1890.1560***2834 Skill0.3340.2890.1110.0840***2834 Interest0.3010.2570.0900.0660***2834 Finland In School Challenge0.3240.2790.1050.0780***1437 Skill0.3270.2810.1070.0790***1437 Interest0.3720.3270.1390.1070***1437 US Science Challenge0.4600.4270.2120.1820***498 Skill0.3030.2620.0920.0690***498 Interest0.2790.2390.0780.0570***498 Finland Science Challenge0.3590.3120.1290.0970***558 Skill0.3280.2820.1070.0790***558 Interest0.3490.3020.1220.0910***558
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Table 3 – t-test of between country differences US MeanFinland MeanUS SEFinland SET-valueP-value All Engagement0.1500.1530.0050.006-0.360.72 Challenge000.0150.01701 Skill000.0150.01701 Interest000.0150.01701 Out School Engagement0.1420.1250.0090.0081.410.159 Challenge-0.141-0.2330.0240.0212.840.005*** Skill0.036-0.0230.0250.0231.750.081* Interest0.0740.0170.0260.0241.620.104 In School Engagement0.1550.1900.0070.010-2.880.004*** Challenge0.0780.018 0.025-7.20<0.001*** Skill-0.0200.0280.0180.025-1.530.125 Interest-0.041-0.0220.0180.023-0.660.512 In Science Engagement0.1240.2220.0150.018-4.19<0.001*** Challenge0.1030.3140.0430.040-3.60<0.001*** Skill-0.0940.0150.0460.039-1.820.069* Interest-0.1330.0910.0430.035-4.06<0.001*** Notes: Means and standard errors are based on standardized person means. *=.10 significance, **=.05 significance, and ***=.01 significance.
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Findings of analysis Overall and out of school challenge is the biggest driver of engagement in both countries In the United States it is same for in school and in science In Finland it is interest in school and equal in science In both countries students feel lower levels of challenge and skill out of school and lower levels of interest in school US students show very low interest in science Finnish students show higher levels of engagement in school, in science, and for each emotion in science US students show higher levels outside of school but the difference is only significant for the emotions, not engagement
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Future Steps for Analysis More in depth exploration of other predictors of engagement Explore and test other possible definitions More exploration of other correlates of engagement See what are the other related emotions when students are engaged (or not) Look at student background and teacher characteristics Gender, SES, teacher experience Need to explore the nested structure of the dataset Requires methodology that is not well known
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Future Steps for Project Collecting more detailed science teacher lesson data Link it directly with the ESM data Better understand what is happening in science classroom when students are engaged or not Create a more explicit partnership with teachers Show them their students data Create some PD workshops utilizing that information
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Thank you! I appreciate your time and interest Please feel free to contact me Justin Bruner Michigan State University brunerju@msu.edu
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Literature Review Why science? Declining number of students are studying science beyond requirements globally (Osborne et al., 2003). United States fills about 90% of H-1B Visas in STEM professions (Rothwell and Ruiz, 2013) STEM jobs offer many employment premiums over other professions (Langdon et al., 2011) What is happening? Gender differences Teacher differences Quality of teaching Curriculum Cultural Diffences
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Literature Review Students see science as too difficult and have difficulty seeing it outside the classroom (Lavonen et al., 2008, Lavonen and Laaksonen, 2009, Osborne et al., 2003) Girls generally experience science in more negative way than boys (Griffith, 2010, Osborne et al., 2003, Uitto et al., 2006, Reigel-Crumb and Moore, 2013) Science teachers vary in quality Connected instruction, academic rigor, lively teaching (Cooper 2013) Cultural Differences (Tsai and Yang, 2011) Asian students show higher performance but low interest in science. Cultural mediating factors.
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