A Comparison of Online and Traditional Undergraduate Introductory Physics

PI Emily Faulconer

While the equivalence between online and traditional classrooms has been well-researched, very little of this includes college level introductory physics. Only one study explored physics at the whole-class level rather than specific course components such as a single lab or a homework platform. In this work, we compared the failure rate, grade distribution, and withdrawal rates in an introductory undergraduate physics course across several learning modes including traditional face-to-face instruction, synchronous video instruction, and online classes.

In this study, statistically significant differences were found for student failure rates, grade distribution, and withdrawal rates but yielded small effect sizes.  Post-hoc pair-wise test were run to determine differences between learning modes.  Online students had a significantly lower failure rate than students who took the class via synchronous video classroom.  While statistically significant differences were found for grade distributions, the pair-wise comparison yielded no statistically significance differences between learning modes when using the more conservative Bonferroni correction in post-hoc testing.   Finally, in this study, student withdrawal rates were lowest for students who took the class in person (in-person classroom and synchronous video classroom) than online.  Students that persist in an online introductory physics class are more likely to achieve an A than in other modes. However, the withdrawal rate is higher from online physics courses.  Further research is warranted to better understand the reasons for higher withdrawal rates in online courses. Finding the root cause to help eliminate differences in student performance across learning modes should remain a high priority for education researchers and the education community as a whole.

Research Dates

01/01/2017 to 05/01/2018

Researchers

  • Emily K. Faulconer
    Department
    Department of Mathematics, Science and Technology
    Degrees
    Ph.D., University of Florida
    B.S., Virginia Commonwealth University
  • John C. Griffith
    Department
    Department of Mathematics, Science and Technology
    Degrees
    Ph.D., University of North Texas
    M.S., Central Michigan University
    B.S., Southern Illinois University Carbondale
  • Donna  Roberts
    Department
    Department of Behavioral and Social Sciences
    Degrees
    Ph.D., Northcentral University
    M.A.S., M.B.A., Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University
    M.Ed., M., University of Oklahoma Norman Campus
    M.Ed., B.S., A.A., University of Maryland-University College
  • Beverly L Wood
    Department
    Department of Mathematics, Science and Technology
    Degrees
    Ph.D., University of Virginia-Main Campus
    M.S., University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh
    B.S., The University of Tampa

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