Ramirez 2011 Testing Worries Flashcards
Working memory
A short-term memory system involved in the control and regulation of a limited amount of info immediately relevant to the task at hand
Hypotheses
- Worries can occupy “space” in WM and adversely affect performance
- Expressive writing might
- Help reduce rumination and
- alleviate the burden of worry on WM
- Might enhance performance
What are the key concepts in what we read?
worries, working memory, test performance
What question(s) did the author(s) set out to answer?
Remaining from 1 to 2 → Would any kind of writing alleviate pressure? Maybe its enough to be distracted by writing
How did the author(s) go about studying their research question(s)? (Study 1)
Method
- N = 20 college students
- Math pre-test
- induced pressure
- Monetary incentives ($ for performance on our math test)
- Peer pressure (”team effort” and partner already succeeded)
- Social evaluation (videotaped Ts and Ss would watch)
- Conditions
- Control: sit quietly for 10 min
- Treatment: expressive writing assignment - thoughts about impending math test
- Math Posttest (DV)
How did the author(s) go about studying their research question(s)? (study 2)
Lab study 2
- Replication of study 1
- Conditions
- Control: sit quietly for 10 min
- Treatment: Expressive writing assignment
- Unrelated writing: write about an unrelated unemotional event
Field studies - Hypotheses
- Students most prone to worry will show the largest benefit of writing
- Expressive writing will eliminate negative relation between test anxiety and performance
How did the author(s) go about studying their research question(s)? (Field Study)
Method
- Same study twice, 1 year apart
- N =51 and 55 9th graders about to take a final
- Randomly assigned, within the teacher to 1 of 2 conditions:
- expressively writing: write thoughts about the coming exam
- control: write thoughts about a topic not on the exam
- 10 minutes to write
- Measures
- Test anxiety
- Midterm and final exam scores
What did they find (study 1)
Study 1
- Pretest: no difference across experiment and control groups
- Posttest: The experimental (i.e. expressive writing) group performed significantly better than the control group
- Control Group (sit quietly) choked (significantly worse than pre)
- The experimental group improved significantly compared to the pretest
What did they find (study 2
- Pretest: no difference across groups
- Posttest:
- Control group (sit quietly) : performance dropped significantly
- Expressive writing group: significant gain
- Unrelated writing group: performance dropped significantly
- Analysis of Writing Content
- Result:
- What worked in the expressive wriiting group is that Ss wrote about their worries (this helps!)
What did they find (Field Study)
- Control condition: (wrote but not about worries)
- the higher Ss’ test anxiety, the lower their final exam score
- Expressive writing condition:
- No Correlation between Ss’ level of anxiety and their final exam score
- Median split on anxiety
- Those low in anxiety showed no difference on final as a function of writing condition
- Those high in anxiety who wrote expressively
- Outperformed controls ( B+ vs. B- )
- Performed similarly to those low in anxiety
Why should we care?
- Testing is anxiety-inducing
- We should try to minimize the anxiety in students