Assessing the effectiveness of the HBL pedagogy
Abstract
Scope and Method of Study: An exploratory set of studies was conducted to compare the effectiveness of the HBL and PBI pedagogies. During two different semesters (fall 2003 and spring 2004), 83 Oklahoma State University elementary education students (77 female, 6 male) received identical content instruction differing only in pedagogy. Students were assessed regarding self-efficacy, physics expectations, science process skills, and physics content. Findings and Conclusions: Analyses reveal that HBL and PBI cause statistically similar gains in elementary education students' self-efficacy scores and physics expectations. Both populations were similar before and after instruction, with similar changes in performance occurring on the same items; no statistically significant differences were caused by pedagogy. While no significant differences in Exam Item performance existed for Light and Color or Astronomy by Sight problems, HBL caused a significant student score improvement on the Electric Circuits problem. Analysis revealed that the SPAMSS instrument is likely inappropriate for this audience, although both groups scored approximately 90% on the instrument. The major analysis conclusion is that HBL produces largely the same results as PBI, providing explicit evidence that open and directed inquiry pedagogies can be equally effective.
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- OSU Dissertations [11222]