AI Article Synopsis

  • Science anxiety is defined as the negative emotions students experience when learning science, which can impact their performance.
  • The study introduced the Abbreviated Science Anxiety Scale (ASAS), identifying two main types of anxiety: learning science anxiety and science evaluation anxiety, with findings showing these factors negatively correlate with science achievement.
  • Results indicated that Arts track students experienced more science anxiety than those in the Sciences track, and females reported higher levels of anxiety than males, establishing ASAS as a reliable tool for enhancing science education.

Article Abstract

Science anxiety refers to students' negative emotions about learning science. Across two studies, we investigated the psychometric properties of the newly developed Abbreviated Science Anxiety Scale (ASAS), which was adapted from the modified Abbreviated Math Anxiety Scale (m-AMAS) (Carey E., 2017). Using a sample of students in grades 7 to 10 (N = 710), Study 1 reported a two-factor structure of the ASAS (learning science anxiety and science evaluation anxiety) and negative associations between the ASAS factors and science achievement. Study 2 replicated this two-factor model in students in grades 11 and 12 (N = 362) and found that students in the "Arts" track were more anxious about science than those in "Sciences" track. Both studies consistently reported positive inter-correlations between the ASAS factors, with good internal reliabilities and modest meaningful associations with test anxiety and general anxiety, suggesting that science anxiety might be a distinct construct. Further, female students had higher science anxiety (especially science evaluation anxiety) than male students, even when test anxiety and general anxiety were considered in models. In summary, the ASAS is a brief, valid, and reliable instrument that can be used to guide and improve science education.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7880483PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0245200PLOS

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