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Main Author: Yanchenko, Eric
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2409.16613
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author Yanchenko, Eric
author_facet Yanchenko, Eric
contents Oral exams are a powerful tool to assess student's learning. This is particularly important in introductory statistics classes where students struggle to grasp various topics like the interpretation of probability, $p$-values and more. The challenge of acquiring conceptual understanding is only heightened when students are learning in a second language. In this paper, I share my experience administering oral exams to an introductory statistics class of non-native English speakers at a Japanese university. I explain the context of the university and course, before detailing the exam. Of particular interest is the relationship between exam performance and English proficiency. The results showed little relationship between the two, meaning the exam seemed to truly test student's statistical knowledge rather than their English ability. I close with encouragements and recommendations for practitioners hoping to implement similar oral exams, focusing on the unique difficulties faced by students not learning in their mother tongue.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2409_16613
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Oral exams in introductory statistics class with non-native English speakers
Yanchenko, Eric
Other Statistics
Oral exams are a powerful tool to assess student's learning. This is particularly important in introductory statistics classes where students struggle to grasp various topics like the interpretation of probability, $p$-values and more. The challenge of acquiring conceptual understanding is only heightened when students are learning in a second language. In this paper, I share my experience administering oral exams to an introductory statistics class of non-native English speakers at a Japanese university. I explain the context of the university and course, before detailing the exam. Of particular interest is the relationship between exam performance and English proficiency. The results showed little relationship between the two, meaning the exam seemed to truly test student's statistical knowledge rather than their English ability. I close with encouragements and recommendations for practitioners hoping to implement similar oral exams, focusing on the unique difficulties faced by students not learning in their mother tongue.
title Oral exams in introductory statistics class with non-native English speakers
topic Other Statistics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2409.16613