Effects of Self-Recording and Contingent Credit on Balancing Participation Across Students |
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Authors: | K. R. Krohn K. B. Aspiranti L. N. Foster D. F. McCleary C. M. Taylor M. L. Nalls C. C. Quillivan R. L. Williams |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Educational Psychology and Counseling, The University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN, 37996, USA
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Abstract: | This study compared the effects of students’ (a) receiving participation credit with and without self-recording their participation and (b) self-recording participation with and without receiving credit for participation on the percentage of students functioning at four participation levels: non-participation, credit-level participation, frequent participation (slightly above credit-level), and dominant participation (2.5+ times above credit-level). Participants came from three sections of a relatively large discussion course (initially 55 students per section). Credit (with and without self-recording participation) decreased the percentage of both non-participants and dominant participants and increased the percentage of credit-level participants, thus creating greater balance in participation across students in each class. In contrast, self-recording versus non-self-recording (with and without credit) did not significantly differentiate the percentages of either non-participants or frequent participants but did differentiate the percentages of credit-level and dominant participants under the recording conditions. |
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