The Relationship Between Learning Mode and Student Performance in an Undergraduate Elementary Statistics Course in the United States

John C Griffith, Emily K. Faulconer, Bobby L. McMasters

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Faculty have conducted many studies on the relationship between learning mode and student performance but few researchers have evaluated final grades, grade distribution, and pass rates in a sophomore introductory statistics course with a non-traditional student population who self-selected the learning mode from among different course sections. Accordingly, we examined 307 end-of-course grades from four different modes of instruction: (a) online, (b) videosynchronous learning classroom, (c) videosynchronous learning home, and (d) traditional classroom in an introductory statistics course. All data on grades, which included pass rate and grade distribution, were collected from the nine-week January 2019 term. All learning modes used the same text, syllabus, assignments, quizzes, and tests. In this study, learning mode was not significantly related to end-of-course score, final grade distribution, or pass rate. Future researchers should explore the impacts of gender, instructor quality, different term lengths, and the standardized use of textbooks and syllabi on student performance when exploring the impact of learning mode on grades, grade distribution, and pass rates.

Original languageAmerican English
JournalThe International Review of Research in Open and Distributed Learning
Volume22
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 1 2021

Keywords

  • distance learning
  • online education
  • quality in higher education
  • student performance
  • grade distribution

Disciplines

  • Curriculum and Instruction
  • Online and Distance Education

Cite this