Fear of the unknown: Relationship between statistics anxiety and attitudes toward statistics of university students in three countries

Author:

Korolkiewicz Malgorzata1ORCID,Fewster‐Young Nick2ORCID,Marmolejo‐Ramos Fernando3ORCID,Gabriel Florence3ORCID,Kariuki Pamela4,López Puga Jorge5ORCID,Marrone Rebecca3ORCID,Miles Andrew6,Ruiz‐Ruano García Ana María7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Change and Complexity in Learning, UniSA STEM University of South Australia Adelaide South Australia Australia

2. UniSA STEM, University of South Australia Adelaide South Australia Australia

3. Centre for Change and Complexity in Learning, Education Futures University of South Australia Adelaide South Australia Australia

4. Education Futures University of South Australia Adelaide South Australia Australia

5. Department of Personality, Evaluation and Psychological Treatment, Faculty of Psychology University of Granada Granada Spain

6. Department of Sociology University of Toronto Mississauga Ontario Canada

7. Department of Developmental and Educational Psychology, Faculty of Education University of Granada Granada Spain

Abstract

AbstractIn an increasingly data‐driven world, statistical literacy is a necessity yet statistical learning is often inhibited by statistics anxiety. Using the Auzmendi Scale to Measure Attitude toward Statistics (ASMAS), this study examines how statistics anxiety in university students is related to other dimensions of their attitudes toward statistics and how statistics anxiety and other dimensions change following introductory statistics instruction. Based on data collected from Spain, Canada, and Australia, this study finds that anxiety is negatively related to security–confidence, pleasantness, and motivation. The structure of these relationships is consistent across countries and disciplines and remains in place after statistics instruction. Further, by the end of an introductory statistics course, students report higher security–confidence and pleasantness but lower anxiety. Results thus suggest where efforts to improve students' experience with statistics might need to be directed, and the paper concludes with a discussion of the implications of these results for statistics instruction.

Publisher

Wiley

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