Sustainable learning, cognitive gains, and improved attitudes in College Algebra flipped classrooms
N. Karjanto, M. J. Acelajado

TL;DR
This study investigates how flipped classrooms in college algebra enhance students' cognitive skills and attitudes, showing generally better learning outcomes and more positive perceptions compared to traditional methods.
Contribution
It provides empirical evidence that flipped classroom pedagogy improves both academic achievement and attitudes toward mathematics among college freshmen.
Findings
FCP generally outperforms CTM in cognitive gains
Students exhibit more positive attitudes and cooperation in FCP
Significant improvements in learning outcomes across topics
Abstract
The objective of this article is to investigate the effect of active-learning pedagogy on learners' academic achievement and their attitude toward mathematics using both quantitative and qualitative methods. We cultivated sustainable learning in mathematics education for college freshmen () by exposing them to both the conventional teaching method (CTM) and flipped classroom pedagogy (FCP). By splitting them into control and experimental groups alternately (, ) and by selecting the four most challenging topics in college algebra, we measured their cognitive gains quantitatively via a sequence of pre- and post-tests. Both groups improved academically over time across all these four topics with statistically very significant outcomes . Although they were not always statistically significant () in some topics, the post-test results suggest…
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