A General Math Anxiety Measure

  • Stephanie Kelly
  • , Stephen M. Croucher
  • , Kyung Yong Kim
  • , Tatiana Permyakova
  • , Elira Turdubaeva
  • , Kenneth T. Rocker
  • , Nadirabegim Eskiçorapçı
  • , Gulzada Stanalieva
  • , Bakyt Orunbekov
  • , Sucharat Rimkeeratikul

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

Math anxiety is a psychological burden that can hinder individuals across their lifetimes. However, the current literature lacks a valid measure of math anxiety that can be used across instructional modalities and among non-student populations. As such, it is difficult to assess math anxiety in virtual learning environments, track math anxiety across lifetimes, or determine the utility of math anxiety inoculations for non-student populations. This study presents a validity portfolio for a generalized math anxiety measure that can be used across teaching modalities, across lifetimes, and is simple enough to be used cross-culturally. The measure yielded evidence of validity when used in all tested samples: the United States (student and non-student samples), New Zealand (student and non-student samples), Kyrgyzstan (non-student sample), Turkey (non-student sample), Russia (non-student sample), and Thailand (non-student sample). The data support the use of the new math anxiety measure free of context.
Original languageEnglish
Article number370
JournalEducation Sciences
Volume12
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 1 2022

Keywords

  • cross-cultural
  • math anxiety
  • measurement
  • validity

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