A cross-national study of classroom environment and attitudes among junior secondary science students in Australia and in Indonesia

One purpose of the present study was to validate a modified version of the What is Happening In This Class? (WIHIC) questionnaire and the Test of Science Related Attitude (TOSRA) in both Australia and Indonesia. It was the first classroom environment study that used the two above questionnaires simu...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Adolphe, Francois
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Curtin University 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/547
_version_ 1848743409975558144
author Adolphe, Francois
author_facet Adolphe, Francois
author_sort Adolphe, Francois
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description One purpose of the present study was to validate a modified version of the What is Happening In This Class? (WIHIC) questionnaire and the Test of Science Related Attitude (TOSRA) in both Australia and Indonesia. It was the first classroom environment study that used the two above questionnaires simultaneously in these two countries. The second aim of this study was to find out whether the scores on the WIHIC questionnaire and TOSRA vary with country and with gender. The third and final aim of this study was to evaluate the strength of the associations between students' perceptions of their classroom environment and their attitude to science in both Australia and Indonesia. The sample consisted of 1,161 students (594 students from 18 classes in Indonesia and 567 students from 18 classes in Australia). All the students came from private coeducational schools. The original WIHIC questionnaire had eight scales made up of ten items per scale while the original version of TOSRA had seven scales made up of ten items per scale. Principal components factor analysis followed by varimax rotation resulted in the acceptance of a revised version of the WIHIC comprising 55 items and a revised version of TOSRA comprising 20 items. The a priori factor structure of the revised version of each questionnaire was replicated in both countries, with nearly all items having a factor loading of at least 0.30 on their a priori scale and no other scale.The use of MANOVA revealed that there were a few differences between Australian and Indonesian students' perceptions of their classroom environments and in their attitudes to science. For example, Australian students had a more positive attitude towards scientific inquiry while Indonesian students had a more positive attitude towards career interest in Science. A comparison between male and female students in the two countries revealed that both genders had almost similar perceptions of their learning environments and attitudes to science. However, female students had a slightly higher score when it came to career interest in science, student cohesiveness and equity. A series of simple correlation and multiple regression analyses revealed reasonably strong and positive associations between each classroom environment scale and the attitude scale. Overall Teacher Support and Involvement were the strongest independent predictors of student attitudes to science in both Indonesia and Australia.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T05:45:07Z
format Thesis
id curtin-20.500.11937-547
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T05:45:07Z
publishDate 2002
publisher Curtin University
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-5472017-02-20T06:41:52Z A cross-national study of classroom environment and attitudes among junior secondary science students in Australia and in Indonesia Adolphe, Francois learning environment student attitudes science education One purpose of the present study was to validate a modified version of the What is Happening In This Class? (WIHIC) questionnaire and the Test of Science Related Attitude (TOSRA) in both Australia and Indonesia. It was the first classroom environment study that used the two above questionnaires simultaneously in these two countries. The second aim of this study was to find out whether the scores on the WIHIC questionnaire and TOSRA vary with country and with gender. The third and final aim of this study was to evaluate the strength of the associations between students' perceptions of their classroom environment and their attitude to science in both Australia and Indonesia. The sample consisted of 1,161 students (594 students from 18 classes in Indonesia and 567 students from 18 classes in Australia). All the students came from private coeducational schools. The original WIHIC questionnaire had eight scales made up of ten items per scale while the original version of TOSRA had seven scales made up of ten items per scale. Principal components factor analysis followed by varimax rotation resulted in the acceptance of a revised version of the WIHIC comprising 55 items and a revised version of TOSRA comprising 20 items. The a priori factor structure of the revised version of each questionnaire was replicated in both countries, with nearly all items having a factor loading of at least 0.30 on their a priori scale and no other scale.The use of MANOVA revealed that there were a few differences between Australian and Indonesian students' perceptions of their classroom environments and in their attitudes to science. For example, Australian students had a more positive attitude towards scientific inquiry while Indonesian students had a more positive attitude towards career interest in Science. A comparison between male and female students in the two countries revealed that both genders had almost similar perceptions of their learning environments and attitudes to science. However, female students had a slightly higher score when it came to career interest in science, student cohesiveness and equity. A series of simple correlation and multiple regression analyses revealed reasonably strong and positive associations between each classroom environment scale and the attitude scale. Overall Teacher Support and Involvement were the strongest independent predictors of student attitudes to science in both Indonesia and Australia. 2002 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/547 en Curtin University fulltext
spellingShingle learning environment
student attitudes
science education
Adolphe, Francois
A cross-national study of classroom environment and attitudes among junior secondary science students in Australia and in Indonesia
title A cross-national study of classroom environment and attitudes among junior secondary science students in Australia and in Indonesia
title_full A cross-national study of classroom environment and attitudes among junior secondary science students in Australia and in Indonesia
title_fullStr A cross-national study of classroom environment and attitudes among junior secondary science students in Australia and in Indonesia
title_full_unstemmed A cross-national study of classroom environment and attitudes among junior secondary science students in Australia and in Indonesia
title_short A cross-national study of classroom environment and attitudes among junior secondary science students in Australia and in Indonesia
title_sort cross-national study of classroom environment and attitudes among junior secondary science students in australia and in indonesia
topic learning environment
student attitudes
science education
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/547