The Influence of Learning and Teaching Styles on Student Attitudes and Achievement in the Introductory Economics Course: A Case Study
1982; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 13; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1080/00220485.1982.10844984
ISSN2152-4068
AutoresJames N. Wetzel, W. James Potter, Dennis M. O’Toole,
Tópico(s)Management and Marketing Education
ResumoResearch on the impact of learning style preferences is very rare in economic education. This article reports the results of a project in which the student's preferred learning style and the instructor's teaching style were included as variables in a regression model. Those favoring independent styles achieved significantly more than students favoring dependent styles. Changes in student attitudes towards economics were also taken into account. The researchers assert that the addition of these variables also "greatly increases the power of the model to explain variation in student achievement and attitudes concerning economics."
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