TY - JOUR
T1 - Exploration of Student Perceptions, Behaviors and Academic Performance in Construction Management Classes
AU - Maghiar, Marcel
AU - Sturges, Diana
AU - Maurer, Trent W
AU - Jackson, Mike
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015, Routledge.
PY - 2015/2/18
Y1 - 2015/2/18
N2 - To improve student success, instructors need to understand how students feel about their own learning and how much responsibility the students take for it. This information is crucial to teaching and to the development of more effective courses. Yet, very often, instructors in higher education focus on content learning exclusively. While summative assessment of learning in these courses is important, content learning is not the only measure of educational outcomes. This study used an instrument-surveying tool in which the Course Valuing Inventory (CVI) was adapted for Construction Management (CM) courses to evaluate cognitive-content, affective-personal and behavioral learning in students taking these courses. The study also examined the relationship between course valuing scores, Approaches to Study Inventory (ASI), and course performance. Results indicated that the CVI can be adapted for use in CM courses. Multiple regressions run in this exploratory study predicting final course grade from seven predictor variables (student class standing, student self-reported GPA, whether the course was required for the student’s major, likelihood of student continuing with their current major, grade that student anticipated receiving in the course, ASI score, and CVI score), revealed that six of the variables were significant predictors of final course grades.
AB - To improve student success, instructors need to understand how students feel about their own learning and how much responsibility the students take for it. This information is crucial to teaching and to the development of more effective courses. Yet, very often, instructors in higher education focus on content learning exclusively. While summative assessment of learning in these courses is important, content learning is not the only measure of educational outcomes. This study used an instrument-surveying tool in which the Course Valuing Inventory (CVI) was adapted for Construction Management (CM) courses to evaluate cognitive-content, affective-personal and behavioral learning in students taking these courses. The study also examined the relationship between course valuing scores, Approaches to Study Inventory (ASI), and course performance. Results indicated that the CVI can be adapted for use in CM courses. Multiple regressions run in this exploratory study predicting final course grade from seven predictor variables (student class standing, student self-reported GPA, whether the course was required for the student’s major, likelihood of student continuing with their current major, grade that student anticipated receiving in the course, ASI score, and CVI score), revealed that six of the variables were significant predictors of final course grades.
KW - course valuing inventory
KW - learning
KW - pedagogy
KW - undergraduate
KW - value-based experience
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84945475185&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/15578771.2015.1009960
DO - 10.1080/15578771.2015.1009960
M3 - Article
SN - 1557-8771
VL - 11
SP - 241
EP - 256
JO - International Journal of Construction Education and Research
JF - International Journal of Construction Education and Research
IS - 4
ER -