Language difficulty among chemistry students in the use of non-technical words in chemistry textbooks

This study attempts to identify the non-technical words commonly used in high school and college chemistry textbooks and to determine their degrees of difficulty. The study has two parts: the development, try-out and validation of the Word Knowledge Test (WKT) and the investigation of students langu...

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Main Author: Pimentel, Regina Q.
Format: text
Language:English
Published: Animo Repository 1997
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_doctoral/783
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Institution: De La Salle University
Language: English
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:etd_doctoral-17822021-05-12T03:45:01Z Language difficulty among chemistry students in the use of non-technical words in chemistry textbooks Pimentel, Regina Q. This study attempts to identify the non-technical words commonly used in high school and college chemistry textbooks and to determine their degrees of difficulty. The study has two parts: the development, try-out and validation of the Word Knowledge Test (WKT) and the investigation of students language competencies.The subjects of the study were 400 high school and 400 college students randomly selected and stratified into private, public and vocational-technical (voc-tech) schools.To validate the WKT, Item Analysis and Rasch Analysis were conducted. For the investigation, the following tests were employed: descriptive statistics like frequency, percentage, mean, standard deviation t-test one way Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) Linear and Multiple Regression and the Newman Error Analysis.Statistical findings showed that Item Analysis and Rasch Analysis gave an alpha value of 0.927 and an item estimates value of 0.902 and 0.903 for Sets A and B, respectively. The t-test yielded -2.09 t value for high school and 0.081 for college. For high school the ANOVA produced a p value of 0.02 and 0.179 in college. Linear and Multiple Regression yielded a correlation coefficient r2 value of 0.014 and an R2 of 0.369 for high school 0.013 and 0.306 for college, respectively. Lastly, the Newman Error Analysis indicated a high proportion of 71.89 percent errors in Comprehension, 7.33 percent in Transformation, 0.61 percent in Reading and 18.33 percent in Carelessness. The findings showed that the Word Knowledge Test is a valid and reliable instrument. High school students have greater difficulty in non-technical words inadequate knowledge of the meaning and lack precision in its usage than college students. College students on the other hand, have more facility and ease in the use of non-technical vocabulary than high school students.In terms of performance in WKT, gender was a factor and the type of school determined the performance of students in high school but not in college. Male students performed better than female and students from private schools performed better than those from public and voc-tech schools in high school. There was no significant difference in performance in college. Comprehension and Transformation problems affect performance. 1997-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_doctoral/783 Dissertations English Animo Repository Chemistry--Study and teaching Language and Languages--Ability testing Textbooks Science--Language Chemistry students High school students Chemistry
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
language English
topic Chemistry--Study and teaching
Language and Languages--Ability testing
Textbooks
Science--Language
Chemistry students
High school students
Chemistry
spellingShingle Chemistry--Study and teaching
Language and Languages--Ability testing
Textbooks
Science--Language
Chemistry students
High school students
Chemistry
Pimentel, Regina Q.
Language difficulty among chemistry students in the use of non-technical words in chemistry textbooks
description This study attempts to identify the non-technical words commonly used in high school and college chemistry textbooks and to determine their degrees of difficulty. The study has two parts: the development, try-out and validation of the Word Knowledge Test (WKT) and the investigation of students language competencies.The subjects of the study were 400 high school and 400 college students randomly selected and stratified into private, public and vocational-technical (voc-tech) schools.To validate the WKT, Item Analysis and Rasch Analysis were conducted. For the investigation, the following tests were employed: descriptive statistics like frequency, percentage, mean, standard deviation t-test one way Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) Linear and Multiple Regression and the Newman Error Analysis.Statistical findings showed that Item Analysis and Rasch Analysis gave an alpha value of 0.927 and an item estimates value of 0.902 and 0.903 for Sets A and B, respectively. The t-test yielded -2.09 t value for high school and 0.081 for college. For high school the ANOVA produced a p value of 0.02 and 0.179 in college. Linear and Multiple Regression yielded a correlation coefficient r2 value of 0.014 and an R2 of 0.369 for high school 0.013 and 0.306 for college, respectively. Lastly, the Newman Error Analysis indicated a high proportion of 71.89 percent errors in Comprehension, 7.33 percent in Transformation, 0.61 percent in Reading and 18.33 percent in Carelessness. The findings showed that the Word Knowledge Test is a valid and reliable instrument. High school students have greater difficulty in non-technical words inadequate knowledge of the meaning and lack precision in its usage than college students. College students on the other hand, have more facility and ease in the use of non-technical vocabulary than high school students.In terms of performance in WKT, gender was a factor and the type of school determined the performance of students in high school but not in college. Male students performed better than female and students from private schools performed better than those from public and voc-tech schools in high school. There was no significant difference in performance in college. Comprehension and Transformation problems affect performance.
format text
author Pimentel, Regina Q.
author_facet Pimentel, Regina Q.
author_sort Pimentel, Regina Q.
title Language difficulty among chemistry students in the use of non-technical words in chemistry textbooks
title_short Language difficulty among chemistry students in the use of non-technical words in chemistry textbooks
title_full Language difficulty among chemistry students in the use of non-technical words in chemistry textbooks
title_fullStr Language difficulty among chemistry students in the use of non-technical words in chemistry textbooks
title_full_unstemmed Language difficulty among chemistry students in the use of non-technical words in chemistry textbooks
title_sort language difficulty among chemistry students in the use of non-technical words in chemistry textbooks
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 1997
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_doctoral/783
_version_ 1712574610208194560