Consideration of learning orientations as an application of achievement goals in evaluating life science majors in introductory physics
Andrew J.Mason, Charles A. Bertram

TL;DR
This study examines how achievement goals influence life science majors' attitudes and performance in an introductory physics course, highlighting the importance of learning orientations in pedagogical transformation.
Contribution
It introduces a framework for assessing achievement goals in physics education and links these goals to student attitudes and performance across different majors.
Findings
Mastery and performance goals influence attitudinal shifts.
Health science majors perform less well regardless of goals.
Learning orientations vary between biology and health science majors.
Abstract
When considering performing an Introductory Physics for Life Sciences course transformation for one's own institution, life science majors' achievement goals are a necessary consideration to ensure the pedagogical transformation will be effective. However, achievement goals are rarely an explicit consideration in physics education research topics such as metacognition. We investigate a sample population of 218 students in a first-semester introductory algebra-based physics course, drawn from 14 laboratory sections within six semesters of course sections, to determine the influence of achievement goals on life science majors' attitudes towards physics. Learning orientations that, respectively, pertain to mastery goals and performance goals, in addition to a learning orientation that does not report a performance goal, were recorded from students in the specific context of learning a…
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