4.2 Article

The Flipped Classroom in a Terminal College Mathematics Course for Liberal Arts Students

Journal

AERA OPEN
Volume 4, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/2332858418759266

Keywords

flipping the classroom; pedagogy; collaborative learning; active learning; linear mixed model; missing data; stereotype threat; complete case analysis; video lectures

Funding

  1. Educational Advancement Foundation [69812]
  2. Scholarship of Teaching and Learning Fellowship, Buffalo State College [205]

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The purpose of this study was to assess the effect of flipping the classroom on final exam scores in a terminal general education college mathematics course for a diverse student population. We employed a quasiexperimental design. Seven instructors collectively taught 13 sections of each pedagogy (flipped/traditional). Six hundred thirty-two students participated. Common final exams were graded concurrently. Mixed-model analyses were performed. Students in flipped sections scored 5.1 percentage points higher on average than those in traditional sections (p = .02) when controlling for math SAT and financial aid status, an improvement of 7.8 points among Black students (p < .01) and 1.0 points among Whites (p= .67). The estimated average difference between White and Black students, conditional on covariates, was 5.2 percentage points in traditional sections (p < .01) and -1.6 in flipped sections (p = .39). The 6.8-point difference in achievement gap between pedagogies was statistically significant (p < .01). Flipping the classroom was associated with improved student performance, particularly among Black students.

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