Students' Knowledge and Perceived Confidence in an Interdisciplinary Experiential-Learning Environment

Authors

  • Adam J Kuban Ball State University
  • Michelle M O'Malley Ball State University
  • Lee J Florea Ball State University

Abstract

Experiential-learning theory suggests that students acquire knowledge through hands-on learning environments, and aspiring journalists need a setting where they can experience science — its process(es) as well as how to report empirical findings. Researchers utilized pre/post questionnaires, field-notebook evaluation, and focus-group analysis as methods to assess an interdisciplinary, experiential course that combined science and media undergraduates. Results revealed students valued procedural over fact-based knowledge. Students also indicated increased perceived confidence—even when they answered questions incorrectly.

Author Biographies

Adam J Kuban, Ball State University

Assistant Professor, Department of Journalism

Michelle M O'Malley, Ball State University

Instructor, Department of Journalism

Lee J Florea, Ball State University

Assistant Professor, Department of Geological Sciences

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Published

12/08/2014

Issue

Section

Insights, Case Studies, and Applications