Am I Right? The Effects of Feedback on the Performance in a Mental-Rotation Test in Children
British Journal of Education. Bd. 8. H. 4. Gillingham, Kent: Luton European Centre for Research, Training and Development 2020 S. 95 - 102
Erscheinungsjahr: 2020
ISBN/ISSN: 2054-636X
Publikationstyp: Zeitschriftenaufsatz
Sprache: Englisch
Doi/URN: 10.37745/bje/vol8.no4.p95-102.2020
Geprüft | Bibliothek |
Inhaltszusammenfassung
Gender differences in paper-and-pencil mental-rotation tests are usually larger thanin chronometric versions. Different task characteristics such as time constraints, number of items, or feedback could partly be responsible for these varying gender differences. In the present study, 40 male and 59 female fourth grade children participated in a chronometric mental-rotation test. In the feedback condition, children got individual item-wise feedback while children in the nonfeedback condition go...Gender differences in paper-and-pencil mental-rotation tests are usually larger thanin chronometric versions. Different task characteristics such as time constraints, number of items, or feedback could partly be responsible for these varying gender differences. In the present study, 40 male and 59 female fourth grade children participated in a chronometric mental-rotation test. In the feedback condition, children got individual item-wise feedback while children in the nonfeedback condition got no feedback about their performance. For reaction time, boys outperformed girls and overall, children in the feedback condition reacted faster than children who got no feedback. On a closer look, only boys but not girls benefited from the feedback and gender differences in favour of boys appeared only in the feedback condition. Results indicate that feedback encouraged boys to solve the items faster while it made no difference for girls. For mental-rotation as a spatial task that is perceived as more male-stereotyped, boys could have been more confident in their own ability. The feedback could then have enhanced this confidence so that boys felt sure enough to react faster. It seemed that girls were not able to use the feedback to reduce their own uncertainty.» weiterlesen» einklappen
Klassifikation
DDC Sachgruppe:
Psychologie
Verknüpfte Personen
- Claudia Quaiser-Pohl
- Mitarbeiter/in
(Institut für Psychologie)
- Martina Rahe
- Mitarbeiter/in
(Universität Koblenz)