IndiaVision RSS Feed    Browse IndiaVision on Mobile    Subscribe to me on FriendFeed    Follow us on Twitter    Follow us on Facebook
News | Videos | Hotels | Jobs | Blog | Yellow Pages | Games | Jokes | Chat | e-Cards | Astrology | Articles | Recipes | Send Gifts
IndiaVision - An Informative Site on India
IndiaVision NEWS
Today : Tuesday - May 21, 2013, 06:44pm (GMT+5.5)
All News  
Top News
National News
International News
Business News
Sports News
   » Cricket
   » Football
Entertainment News
Sci - Tech
Politics News
Health & Fitness
Education
Travel
Lifestyle
Gulf News
Featured
 
::| Latest News
News in Pictures

North Korea's military on Tuesday threatened the South with imminent "sledge-hammer" retaliation unless Seoul apologised for anti-Pyongyang protestors burning effigies of its revered leaders.South Korea called the North's ultimatum "regrettable" and vowed a tough response to any military provocation.

Lifestyle
 

Parents can play active role in making teens interested in math and science

Thursday - Jul 12, 2012, 02:39pm (GMT+5.5)
[+] Text [-]

Washington - Experts in research and policy have examined different ways to enhance and promote STEM education – science, technology, engineering and math – among students, but most of these efforts are focused within the four walls of the classroom.

A new study goes beyond the classroom to examine the unique role that parents can play in promoting students’ STEM motivation.

“Our focus for this project was different from our previous work. In classes, we try to promote students’ motivation and performance in that class, but with families, our goal is to promote choices about which courses to take,” said lead author Judith Harackiewicz, of the University of Wisconsin.

Because many math and science classes are not required, especially in the last two years of high school, student enrolment may be a more fundamentally important issue than student motivation.

Harackiewicz and her colleagues Christopher Rozek and Janet Hyde of the University of Wisconsin, and Chris Hulleman of James Madison University, hypothesized that parents could play an instrumental role in helping to boost STEM enrollment.

The researchers decided to test this hypothesis with an intervention that involved 181 U.S. high school students and their parents who were part of the longitudinal Wisconsin Study of Families and Work. The intervention spanned the students’ 10th, 11th, and 12th grade years of high school. This longitudinal project was funded by the National Science Foundation.

In October of 10th grade, the researchers mailed some parents a glossy brochure that provided information about the importance of math and science in daily life and for various careers. In January of 11th grade, they mailed the same parents another brochure that emphasized the same overall themes and included information for a dedicated website called “Choices Ahead.”

The website featured links to resources about STEM fields and careers and included interviews with college students about the importance of the math and science courses they took in high school. In spring of 11th grade, they asked the parents to complete an online questionnaire to evaluate the Choices Ahead website, which helped to ensure that the parents visited the site.

Parents in the control group did not receive any of these materials. In the summer following 12th grade, all families – adolescents and parents – completed a final questionnaire about their interactions with the brochures and the website and their perceived utility of math and science courses. Information about the STEM classes that the students took was obtained through self-report and high school transcripts.

The results suggested that the intervention had a noticeable effect on the courses that the students enrolled in: students whose parents received all the materials as part of the experimental group took more science and math classes in the last two years of high school. The effect amounted to roughly an extra semester of advanced math or science, including courses such as algebra II, trigonometry, pre-calculus, calculus, statistics, chemistry, and physics.

Mothers in the intervention group viewed math and science courses as more useful than did mothers in the control group. And students with parents in the intervention group had more conversations with their parents about course choices, educational plans, and the importance of math and science during 12th grade.

These two factors – having a mother who values STEM and having more conversations about STEM – seemed to enhance students’ own perceptions of the usefulness of STEM courses.

The researchers were surprised by just how effective their modest intervention was.

“It’s well known that children of more educated parents take more math and science courses in high school. The effect of our intervention was just as strong as the parent education effect,” explained Harackiewicz.

These findings provide evidence that interventions with parents could be a useful tool for boosting enrolment in STEM courses and could help to close gaps in student enrolment that result from differences in parental education.

“Although some people question whether parents wield any influence, we think of parents as an untapped resource. This study shows that it is possible to help parents help their teens make academic choices that will prepare them for the future,” said Harackiewicz.

The study has been published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.





|

Rating (Votes: )   

blog comments powered by Disqus

Other Articles:
French cows reared on fine wine to produce best beef (12th Jul, 2012)
Kids urged to learn times tables by heart to develop `fluency` in maths (12th Jul, 2012)
Hemingway's multiple endings for 'Farewell to Arms' published in new edition (12th Jul, 2012)
Dog awakes diabetic owner from coma by licking her (12th Jul, 2012)
$1m gold and diamond bra on sale in US (11th Jul, 2012)
Soon, space-age dress shirts to banish sweat stains (11th Jul, 2012)
Table manners soon to be history (11th Jul, 2012)
Care for a beer in a bar buzzing with bees? (11th Jul, 2012)
US teen jokes through pain after losing arm to alligator (11th Jul, 2012)
Couples purposely having sex sans orgasm to `put spark back into marriage` (11th Jul, 2012)
Why low-income couples marry less and divorce more (11th Jul, 2012)
Gromit was nearly a cat, says animator (11th Jul, 2012)
How Fifty Shades of Grey’s fantasy man would look like (11th Jul, 2012)
Russian women race in 3.5m heels for £2k prize (10th Jul, 2012)
Peeping Toms invited to see naked woman through keyhole at exhibition (10th Jul, 2012)
How men are conned by sexy wiggle of women’s hips (10th Jul, 2012)
Coca-Cola hug machine proves to be huge hit in Singapore (10th Jul, 2012)
A £20m classic Ferrari in world’s most expensive car crash (10th Jul, 2012)
Topless activist arrested for stripping off outside restaurant (10th Jul, 2012)
Lifestyle changes prevent heart disease (10th Jul, 2012)
Oz teens prefer blogs and Google to talking with parents about sex (10th Jul, 2012)
NY pianist selling herself as `painted lady` for billboard ads (9th Jul, 2012)
Chimp up a chimney among fire brigade’s oddest animal rescues (9th Jul, 2012)
A 10 ways to become irresistible to women (9th Jul, 2012)
Brit mum gives birth to twins in different countries (9th Jul, 2012)




Visit IndiaVision On Your Mobile
Downlaod Mobile Apps
Downlaod Android Applications Downlaod Nokia Applications Downlaod BlackBerry Applications
Get Free Mail
Free Mail
Login | Sign Up
Download IndiaVision Free Toolbar
FireFox Safari Internet Explorer
 
Contact Us | Advertise with Us | Privacy Policy | Disclaimer | Terms of Use