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Resumen de The Testing Effect: An Intervention on Behalf of Low-Skilled Comprehenders in General Chemistry

Daniel T. Pyburn, Samuel Pazicni, Victor A. Benassi, Elizabeth M. Tappin

  • Past work has demonstrated that language comprehension ability correlates with general chemistry course performance with medium effect sizes. We demonstrate here that language comprehension�s strong cognitive grounding can be used to inform effective and equitable pedagogies, namely, instructional interventions that differentially aid low-skilled language comprehenders. We report the design, implementation, and assessment of such an intervention strategy. Guided by two models of comprehension, we predicted that a multiple pretesting strategy would differentially aid low-skilled comprehenders in a general chemistry class. We also explored the effect of two question types (multiple choice and elaborative interrogation) on this intervention strategy. A within-subjects, learning-goals driven design was used to build the intervention into two semesters of the course; data generated by this approach were analyzed with hierarchical linear models. We found that the achievement gap between low- and high-skilled comprehenders was partially abated by repeated testing prior to course examinations. We also found that the differential benefits of repeated testing could be accounted for entirely by multiple-choice questions, while elaborative interrogation questions had a statistically significant, but negative, impact. The implication of this work for all levels of chemistry teaching is clear: testing can be used to enhance (not just to assess) student learning, and this act affects different groups of students in different ways.


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