Previous research has shown that when asked to rate their agreement with statements regarding their attitudes towards participation in psychological experiments, students reported that their participation was of educational value (e.g., Bowman and Waite, 2003; Landrum and Chastain, 1995). We investigated what kinds of learning experiences students would report when prompted with open ended questions regarding their participation. Four open ended questions asked how seriously participants took the research experience, what participants gained from studies, what were commonalties among the studies and how their classroom experience helped with understanding the experiments. In addition to reporting that they took their participation seriously, students reported that they learned not only about psychological content but also about the process of conducting psychological research.
CITATION STYLE
Darling, J., Goedert, K., Ceynar, M., Shore, W., & Anderson, D. (2007). Learning about the Means to the End: What US Introductory Psychology Students Report about Experimental Participation. Psychology Learning & Teaching, 6(2), 91–97. https://doi.org/10.2304/plat.2007.6.2.91
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