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Maths anxiety in psychology undergraduates: A mixed–methods approach to formulating and implementing interventions

Authors :
Ross Thompson
Judith Wylie
Donncha Hanna
Source :
Psychology Teaching Review. 22:58-68
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
British Psychological Society, 2016.

Abstract

Due to the empirical nature of the discipline, psychology students, during the course of their degree, are required to become proficient with a range of quantitative methods. Unfortunately many of these students experience high levels of maths anxiety, which can have a damaging effect on this aspect of their educational development. The first study in this paper used focus groups to identify, from psychology undergraduate and postgraduate students, potential interventions that could be used to reduce anxiety in an undergraduate sample. The second study implemented those interventions that were deemed valid and practical on a sample of 246 psychology first and second year undergraduates. The effectiveness of these interventions was mixed, but does suggest further avenues that tertiary educational institutions could take to reduce maths anxiety in their student body, in particular enhancing the use of real–life examples in quantitative methods teaching.

Details

ISSN :
23969571 and 0965948X
Volume :
22
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Psychology Teaching Review
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........7495447d63e96796a8a592a4e4350f52