Ambrose Hans G. Aggabao (Ph.D)
College of Teacher Education, Isabela State University, Philippines
ambhansga@yahoo.com
Date Received: September 30, 2015; Date Revised: November 1, 2015
Asia Pacific Journal of Multidisciplinary Research
Vol. 3 No. 4,138-149
November 2015 Part V
P-ISSN 2350-7756
E-ISSN 2350-8442
Instructional Interventions and Affective Beliefs as Predictors of Achievement and Retention of Learning 871 KB 2 downloads
Ambrose Hans G. Aggabao (Ph.D) College of Teacher Education, Isabela State University,...
Path and factor analyses were used in this study to investigate direct and indirect influences of instructional interventions on achievement and retention of learning among freshmen students in Mathematics as mediated by affective beliefs. The varying classroom contexts were hypothesized to influence affective beliefs through the application of varying instructional interventions – traditional teaching, radical constructivist, and social constructivist. The randomized equivalent groups pre-posttest experimental design was used to generate the needed data for analysis. Results showed that constructivist instructional approaches directly and indirectly influenced achievement measures with the indirect effects mediated by control orientation belief of students which was found to be the only one among four affective beliefs considered in this study to influence achievement measures. Social constructivist interventions did not show direct influence on retention of conceptual understanding and procedural fluency while traditional instructional intervention was not found to be a significant predictor of both affective beliefs and achievement measures.These results confirm for the most part the hypothesized relations among instructional interventions, affective beliefs, and achievement measures.
Keywords: Constructivism, affective beliefs, achievement, retention of learning, conceptual understanding, problem solving skills, procedural knowledge