Issue 3, 2023

Practices in instrument use and development in chemistry education research and practice 2010–2021

Abstract

Assessment instruments that generate quantitative data on attributes (cognitive, affective, behavioral, etc.) of participants are commonly used in the chemistry education community to draw conclusions in research studies or inform practice. Recently, articles and editorials have stressed the importance of providing evidence for the validity and reliability of data collected with these instruments following guidance from the Standards for Educational and Psychological Testing. This study examines how quantitative instruments have been used in the journal Chemistry Education Research and Practice (CERP) from 2010–2021. Of the 369 unique researcher-developed instruments used during this time frame, the majority only appeared in a single publication (89.7%) and were rarely reused. Cognitive topics were the most common target of the instruments (56.6%). Validity and/or reliability evidence was provided in 64.4% of instances where instruments were used in CERP publications. The most frequently reported evidence was single administration reliability (e.g., coefficient alpha), appearing in 47.9% of instances. Only 37.2% of instances reported evidence of both validity and reliability. These results indicate that, as a field, opportunities exist to increase the amount of validity and reliability evidence available for data collected with instruments and that reusing instruments may be one method of increasing this type of data quality evidence for instruments used by the chemistry education community.

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
06 Oct 2022
Accepted
27 Feb 2023
First published
03 Mar 2023

Chem. Educ. Res. Pract., 2023,24, 882-895

Author version available

Practices in instrument use and development in chemistry education research and practice 2010–2021

K. Lazenby, K. Tenney, T. A. Marcroft and R. Komperda, Chem. Educ. Res. Pract., 2023, 24, 882 DOI: 10.1039/D2RP00275B

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