2021
DOI: 10.1002/jee.20411
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First mathematics course in college and graduating in engineering: Dispelling the myth that beginning in higher‐level mathematics courses is always a good thing

Abstract: Background Graduation rates in engineering programs continue to be a concern in higher education. Prior research has documented an association between students' experiences in first‐year mathematics courses and graduation rates, but the influences of the mathematics courses completed and the grades earned are not fully understood. Purpose The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship among the first undergraduate mathematics course a student completes, the grade they earn in this course, and th… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…In many instances, students from different programs, including engineering and science majors, complete similar SET questionnaires for a given mathematics class. Engineering students study mathematics courses as core courses of their study plans, and it was reported that mathematics courses are one of the main challenges engineering students face at the beginning of their academic lives (Wilkins et al, 2021;Gradwohl and Eichler 2018;Derr, 2018). These courses are commonly taught without linking the theory and practice that engineering students need (Gómez-Chacón et al, 2015;Dominguez et al, 2013).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In many instances, students from different programs, including engineering and science majors, complete similar SET questionnaires for a given mathematics class. Engineering students study mathematics courses as core courses of their study plans, and it was reported that mathematics courses are one of the main challenges engineering students face at the beginning of their academic lives (Wilkins et al, 2021;Gradwohl and Eichler 2018;Derr, 2018). These courses are commonly taught without linking the theory and practice that engineering students need (Gómez-Chacón et al, 2015;Dominguez et al, 2013).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One key indicator of persistence appears to be math performance in the first semester of engineering school [9], [10]. While students who perform well typically continue towards successful graduation in engineering, students who do poorly in the first semester tend to leave.…”
Section: Engineering Persistencementioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, Bowen et al also found that calculus eligibility is not a stand-alone predictor for success in engineering; when they controlled for calculus eligibility, they found that achieving good grades and maintaining above a 3.0 GPA are essential to success in engineering [23] . Similarly, recent literature found that calculus-ineligible students who are successful in their first math class (e.g., Pre-Calc) are just as likely to graduate as students who begin in Calculus 1 and are less successful [24], [25] . The increasing amount of literature focused on success in a math class over math placement shows there is more work to be done to understand the experiences of pre-math-ready engineering students.…”
Section: Math Readiness and Engineeringmentioning
confidence: 99%