n Astronomy 101 at the University of New Mexico, we carried out a repeated—items experiment on quizzes and tests to investigate the impact of cooperative testing. This trial was the only change in a reformed course format that had been refined over previous semesters. Our research questions were: • Did cooperative quizzes result in gains for the class overall? • Did these gains “stick” within the semester? In the spring and fall semesters of 2000, students took quizzes individually and in cooperative learning teams, and tests individually. Normalized gain, ⟨g⟩, on the quizzes averaged about 0.4, and effect size about 0.8 (approximately a 10% increase in class mean score). Repeating selected quiz items on a subsequent test demonstrated th...
We incorporated a cooperative learning strategy into an instrumentation course for juniors who were ...
This study investigates the effects of the cooperative learning method, particularly the Student Tea...
In the spring of 2014, I was reading the current issue of The Physics Teacher and an article caught ...
This pilot study examines the effects of the frequent cooperative quizzes on the achievement and cla...
One of the long-standing general undergraduate education requirements common to many colleges and un...
A mixed-method quasi-experimental study was designed to determine how 130 undergraduates in an intro...
This research concerns the development and assessment of a program of introductory astronomy concept...
This research concerns the development and testing of a new type of introductory astronomy curriculu...
Cooperative testing seems a logical complement to cooperative learning, but it is counter to traditi...
This study investigated the transfer of a research-based conceptual course in university-level intro...
Large-lecture introductory astronomy courses for undergraduate, non-science majors present numerous ...
We present the results of a national study on the teaching and learning of astronomy as taught in ge...
Although traditional lectures are still the dominant form of undergraduate instruction, there have b...
In collaborative two-stage exams, students complete a test as individuals and then immediately compl...
We present the results of a national study on the teaching and learning of astronomy as taught in ge...
We incorporated a cooperative learning strategy into an instrumentation course for juniors who were ...
This study investigates the effects of the cooperative learning method, particularly the Student Tea...
In the spring of 2014, I was reading the current issue of The Physics Teacher and an article caught ...
This pilot study examines the effects of the frequent cooperative quizzes on the achievement and cla...
One of the long-standing general undergraduate education requirements common to many colleges and un...
A mixed-method quasi-experimental study was designed to determine how 130 undergraduates in an intro...
This research concerns the development and assessment of a program of introductory astronomy concept...
This research concerns the development and testing of a new type of introductory astronomy curriculu...
Cooperative testing seems a logical complement to cooperative learning, but it is counter to traditi...
This study investigated the transfer of a research-based conceptual course in university-level intro...
Large-lecture introductory astronomy courses for undergraduate, non-science majors present numerous ...
We present the results of a national study on the teaching and learning of astronomy as taught in ge...
Although traditional lectures are still the dominant form of undergraduate instruction, there have b...
In collaborative two-stage exams, students complete a test as individuals and then immediately compl...
We present the results of a national study on the teaching and learning of astronomy as taught in ge...
We incorporated a cooperative learning strategy into an instrumentation course for juniors who were ...
This study investigates the effects of the cooperative learning method, particularly the Student Tea...
In the spring of 2014, I was reading the current issue of The Physics Teacher and an article caught ...