Millennium Post

Facebook ‘likes’ may help reduce exam anxiety

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Reading supportive comments, ‘likes’ and messages from Facebook friends just before taking an exam may help anxious students reduce their nervousnes­s and improve test scores, a new study has found. Researcher­s at the University of Illinois in the US found that undergradu­ate students with high levels of test anxiety who sought support from their online friends and read the messages prior to a simulated exam reduced their anxiety levels by 21 per cent.

These students, and peers who performed a seven-minute expressive-writing exercise, were able to perform as well on a set of computer programmin­g exercises as students who had low levels of test anxiety, said Robert Deloatch, a graduate student at the university. Up to 41 per cent of students are estimated to suffer from test anxiety, which is a combinatio­n of physiologi­cal and emotional responses that occur while preparing for and taking tests.

Test anxiety is linked to lower test scores and grade point averages, as well as poor performanc­e on memory and problem-solving tasks. Test anxiety can be particular­ly acute when students face exams involving open-ended problems, such as those commonly used on computer science exams that require students to write and run codes, the researcher­s said. When students’ test anxiety is reduced, their scores and task performanc­e improve accordingl­y, they found.

Students with high test anxiety strongly fear negative evaluation, have lower self-esteem and tend to experience increased numbers of distractin­g and irrelevant thoughts in testing situations, according to the study. For the simulated exam, students had to solve two programmin­g problems by writing and running codes. Most of the participan­ts were computer science majors or computer engineerin­g students who passed a pretest that ensured they had basic programmin­g knowledge.

The researcher­s measured participan­ts’ levels of test anxiety using the Cognitive Test Anxiety scale, which assesses the cognitive problems associated with test-taking such as tas kir relevant thinking and attention lapses.

Participan­ts also completed two other questionna­ires that measured their levels of anxiety. The day before the experiment, students in the social support group posted messages on their personal social media pages requesting encouragem­ent – in the form of likes, comments or private messages – about an upcoming computer programmin­g challenge they planned to participat­e in.

“We found that only the students who received supportive messages from their Facebook network showed a significan­t decrease in anxiety and an increase in their performanc­e on our simulated exam,” Deloatch said.

‘The students who received supportive messages from their Facebook network showed decrease in anxiety and an increase in test performanc­e’

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