Attitudes toward Science of Urban Seventh-Grade Life Science Students Overtime, and the Relationship to Future Plans, Family, Teacher, Curriculum, and School
- 1 April 1995
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Urban Education
- Vol. 30 (1) , 71-92
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0042085995030001006
Abstract
This study was conducted to determine changes in attitude toward science over time from the end of the first semester to the end of the second semester among seventh-grade life science students in a southeastern urban school system. The average attitude toward science of the 299 seventh graders changed from an undecided to a positive attitude toward science: 54 percent of the student sample remained the same in their attitude toward science, 46 percent had a change in attitude, 36 percent maintained a positive attitude toward science, and 20 percent of the student sample changed from a negative or undecided attitude to a positive attitude. Forty-four percent of the sample ended with a negative or undecided attitude toward science. Attitudinal subscales for this study included attitude toward the science teacher; science curriculum, and school. Significant relationships were found among the attitudinal subscales.Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- A summary of major influences on attitude toward and achievement in science among adolescent studentsScience Education, 1990
- Motivational processes affecting learning.American Psychologist, 1986
- Attitude toward science and achievement motivation profiles of male and female science students in grades six through tenScience Education, 1985
- Relationships among attitude, motivation, and achievement of ability grouped, seventh‐grade, life science studentsScience Education, 1985
- Relationships between peer and individual attitudes toward science among adolescent studentsScience Education, 1985
- Influences on commitment to and learning of science among adolescent studentsScience Education, 1982
- Self-Concept of Ability and School AchievementSociology of Education, 1964