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Personalized System of Instruction (PSI): The Data
PSI may appear to be a new and radical approach to education, but
in fact it has been around since the mid-1960s
(Keller, 1968). PSI has been used at
all levels of education, from elementary schools to university
graduate programs, as well as in military and industrial settings
(Sherman, 1992). College courses
employing PSI have included: introductory psychology, learning,
anthropology, sociology, physics, chemistry, economics, business,
mathematics, biology, nutrition, psychiatry, library science, home
economics, statistics, composition, gerontology, political science,
biochemistry, earth science, engineering, and philosophy
(Taveggia, 1976;
Kulik, Kulik, &
Bangert-Drowns, 1990).
Sherman (1992) speculates that
PSI has generated a remarkable number of research studies, probably
over 2000! What do the data show? Two review articles are especially
enlightening. In the first one,
Taveggia (1976) concluded "when
evaluated by average student performance on course content
examinations, the Personalized System of Instruction has proven
superior to the conventional teaching methods with which it has been
compared" (p. 1032). We might even consider this an
understatement, given that PSI was favored in 28 out of 28
comparisons. As Sherman (1992)
notes: "This was exciting, particularly because it came from a
critic of educational research, who was best known for articles
demonstrating that nothing one does in the classroom makes any
difference" (p. 59).
A later review by Kulik,
Kulik, & Cohen (1979) was even more comprehensive. They
reported the following.
"In 57 of the 61studies comparing PSI and lecture
teaching, final examination performance was superior in the PSI
section" (p. 310). In 48 of these studies it was possible
to express class averages as percentages: "In the typical
PSI class...the final examination average was 73.6; in the
typical conventional class, the average was 65.9."
(p. 311). This is a statistically significant result.
"A somewhat larger PSI effect---an improvement of
about 14 percentage points---is found when achievement
examinations are administered several months after the end of
the course." (p. 317)
"Differences between PSI and control classes also
tend to be more pronounced on essay than on objective
examinations." (p. 317)
"Differences in student rating of PSI and control
classes are also pronounced. Students rate PSI classes as more
enjoyable, more demanding, and higher in overall quality and
contribution to student learning than conventional
classes." (p. 317)
"The size of the PSI-control differences was also
related to the discipline in which a course was offered. But
even when PSI-control differences were smallest, a PSI
superiority was still quite apparent, and PSI had a
statistically demonstrable effect on student achievement. The
superiority of personalized instruction was clear under a
variety of conditions and with good and poor research
designs." (p. 317)
On the downside, a later review by
Kulik, Kulik, &
Bangert-Drowns (1990) reported:
"The percentage of students that complete PSI
college classes is smaller than the percentage that complete
conventional classes" (p. 286). They were careful to
add, however, that better student performance in PSI classes
"is not an illusion created by the withdrawal of the
weaker students before examination time"
(p. 286).
A concern had been raised earlier about critical thinking. Indeed,
researchers have also considered this issue.
Reboy & Semb (1991)
concluded:
"First, evidence indicates that PSI has been
successfully used to teach complex subject matter at levels of
achievement that exceed those attained in a lecture-discussion
format. Moreover, studies have demonstrated PSI's
effectiveness in teaching higher order cognitive skills. Most
of these studies measured transfer effects, but a few
specifically demonstrated either gains in or acquisition of
higher order cognitive skills." (p. 214)
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