Factors Contributing to Attitudinal Gains in Introductory Astronomy Courses
Adam S. Trotter, Daniel E. Reichart, Aaron P. LaCluyz\'e, Rachel, Freed

TL;DR
This study identifies key factors influencing students' attitudes toward STEM after introductory astronomy courses, highlighting the importance of perceived course effectiveness, instructor quality, and specific course components in shaping attitudes.
Contribution
It provides empirical evidence on how various course elements and student perceptions impact attitude gains, emphasizing factors beyond traditional learning outcomes.
Findings
Attitudes are positively correlated with expected grades and perceived course effectiveness.
Mathematical background and STEM career intentions positively influence attitudes.
Perceived workload and institution reputation negatively impact student attitudes.
Abstract
Most students do not enroll in introductory astronomy as part of their major; for many, it is the last science course they will ever take. Thus, it has great potential to shape students' attitudes toward STEM fields for the rest of their life. We therefore argue that it is less important, when assessing the effectiveness of introductory astronomy courses, to explore traditional curricular learning gains than to explore the effects that various course components have on this attitude. We describe the results of our analysis of end-of-semester surveys returned by a total of 749 students in 2014-2015, at 10 institutions that employed at least part of the introductory astronomy lecture and lab curriculum we first implemented at UNC-Chapel Hill in 2009. Surveys were designed to measure each student's attitude, and to probe the correlation of attitude with their utilization of, and…
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