EFFECTS OF TEACHING APPROACH ON PROBLEM SOLVING ABILITY OF AGRICULTURAL EDUCATION STUDENTS WITH VARYING LEARNING STYLES

Authors

  • James E. Dyer Iowa State University
  • Edward W. Osborne University of Illinois

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5032/jae.1996.04038

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to compare the effectiveness of the problem solving approach to the subject matter approach in producing increased problem solving ability in students of varying learning styles. Results indicated that the majority of males were field-independent learners, whereas slightly less than half of the female students were field-independent (48.8%). Results also indicated that students in classes taught by the problem solving approach produced significantly higher problem solving ability test scores than did students in classes taught by the subject matter approach. When teaching approach was analyzed across learning styles, field-independent learners taught by the problem solving approach exhibited significantly higher scores between pretests and posttests. No differences were found between the pretest and posttest scores of either field-dependent or field-neutral learners. Also, no differences across learning styles for the subject matter approach groups were detected.

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Published

1996-12-31

How to Cite

Dyer, J. E., & Osborne, E. W. (1996). EFFECTS OF TEACHING APPROACH ON PROBLEM SOLVING ABILITY OF AGRICULTURAL EDUCATION STUDENTS WITH VARYING LEARNING STYLES. Journal of Agricultural Education, 37(4), 38–45. https://doi.org/10.5032/jae.1996.04038

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