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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Stowell, Jeffrey R., Allan, Wesley D., Teoro, Samantha M.
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ982599
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author Stowell, Jeffrey R.
Allan, Wesley D.
Teoro, Samantha M.
author_facet Stowell, Jeffrey R.
Allan, Wesley D.
Teoro, Samantha M.
Stowell, Jeffrey R.
Allan, Wesley D.
Teoro, Samantha M.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Emotions Experienced by Students Taking Online and Classroom Quizzes Stowell, Jeffrey R. Allan, Wesley D. Teoro, Samantha M. Student Evaluation Test Anxiety Emotional Response Evaluation Methods Computer Assisted Testing Environmental Influences Correlation Scores College Students Questionnaires Emotions experienced during online academic examinations may differ from emotions experienced in the traditional classroom testing situation. Students in a "Psychology of Learning" course (n = 61) completed assessments of emotions before and after a quiz in each of the following settings: online at their own choice of time and location; online in a library computer lab at a fixed time; and in the regular classroom setting. Students low in classroom test anxiety had significantly higher test anxiety levels when taking a quiz online, whereas students who experienced high levels of anxiety in the classroom had similarly high levels of test anxiety across all conditions. Notably, the correlation between test anxiety and performance was weaker in the online conditions than in the classroom condition. Furthermore, the online assessment of student learning may be accompanied by significant changes in emotion. (Contains 2 tables, 1 figure, and 1 footnote.)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ982599
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2012
record_format eric
spellingShingle Emotions Experienced by Students Taking Online and Classroom Quizzes
Stowell, Jeffrey R.
Allan, Wesley D.
Teoro, Samantha M.
Student Evaluation
Test Anxiety
Emotional Response
Evaluation Methods
Computer Assisted Testing
Environmental Influences
Correlation
Scores
College Students
Questionnaires
Emotions Experienced by Students Taking Online and Classroom Quizzes Stowell, Jeffrey R. Allan, Wesley D. Teoro, Samantha M. Student Evaluation Test Anxiety Emotional Response Evaluation Methods Computer Assisted Testing Environmental Influences Correlation Scores College Students Questionnaires Emotions experienced during online academic examinations may differ from emotions experienced in the traditional classroom testing situation. Students in a "Psychology of Learning" course (n = 61) completed assessments of emotions before and after a quiz in each of the following settings: online at their own choice of time and location; online in a library computer lab at a fixed time; and in the regular classroom setting. Students low in classroom test anxiety had significantly higher test anxiety levels when taking a quiz online, whereas students who experienced high levels of anxiety in the classroom had similarly high levels of test anxiety across all conditions. Notably, the correlation between test anxiety and performance was weaker in the online conditions than in the classroom condition. Furthermore, the online assessment of student learning may be accompanied by significant changes in emotion. (Contains 2 tables, 1 figure, and 1 footnote.)
title Emotions Experienced by Students Taking Online and Classroom Quizzes
topic Student Evaluation
Test Anxiety
Emotional Response
Evaluation Methods
Computer Assisted Testing
Environmental Influences
Correlation
Scores
College Students
Questionnaires
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ982599