Cognitive Development in Undergraduate Emerging Adults: How Course-Taking Breadth Supports Skill Formation
This article is a preprint and has not been certified by peer review [What does this mean?].
Author(s) / Creator(s)
Orona, Gabe Avakian
Eccles, Jacqueline Sue
Arum, Richard
Zitzmann, Steffen
Fischer, Christian
Abstract / Description
Theories of cognitive development among emerging adults posit that environmental and age-related influences are responsible for individual differences in complex reasoning abilities. Exposure to and engagement with a diverse set of ideas and perspectives is stipulated to provide a context for which individuals are positioned to coordinate, integrate, and form new abstractions. This notion is implicit in the general education and elective requirements of university programs. In this study, we draw upon the cognitive psychology literature on emerging adult development to examine how intellectual breadth via course-taking patterns relates to gains in cognitive skills. Using recently collected longitudinal data of undergraduates enrolled at a large public university, we leverage a unique set of cognitive measures that tap a string of related constructs. We find moderate associations between intellectual breadth and reasoning skills, with notable differences across cognitive dimensions. Additionally, intellectual curiosity moderates the association between course breadth and cognition. Implications for theories of intellectual development are discussed in relation to undergraduate experiences.
Keyword(s)
cognitive development higher education critical thinking Bayesian statistics coursetaking breadthPersistent Identifier
Date of first publication
2022-09-21
Publisher
PsychArchives
Citation
-
Preprint_Orona et al, 2022.pdfAdobe PDF - 734.85KBMD5: 83073113c40857d1f1a49e273d11c7d8Description: Main Manuscript
-
There are no other versions of this object.
-
Author(s) / Creator(s)Orona, Gabe Avakian
-
Author(s) / Creator(s)Eccles, Jacqueline Sue
-
Author(s) / Creator(s)Arum, Richard
-
Author(s) / Creator(s)Zitzmann, Steffen
-
Author(s) / Creator(s)Fischer, Christian
-
PsychArchives acquisition timestamp2022-09-21T11:46:32Z
-
Made available on2022-09-21T11:46:32Z
-
Date of first publication2022-09-21
-
Abstract / DescriptionTheories of cognitive development among emerging adults posit that environmental and age-related influences are responsible for individual differences in complex reasoning abilities. Exposure to and engagement with a diverse set of ideas and perspectives is stipulated to provide a context for which individuals are positioned to coordinate, integrate, and form new abstractions. This notion is implicit in the general education and elective requirements of university programs. In this study, we draw upon the cognitive psychology literature on emerging adult development to examine how intellectual breadth via course-taking patterns relates to gains in cognitive skills. Using recently collected longitudinal data of undergraduates enrolled at a large public university, we leverage a unique set of cognitive measures that tap a string of related constructs. We find moderate associations between intellectual breadth and reasoning skills, with notable differences across cognitive dimensions. Additionally, intellectual curiosity moderates the association between course breadth and cognition. Implications for theories of intellectual development are discussed in relation to undergraduate experiences.en
-
Publication statusotheren
-
Review statusnotRevieweden
-
Persistent Identifierhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/7487
-
Persistent Identifierhttps://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.8196
-
Language of contenteng
-
PublisherPsychArchivesen
-
Keyword(s)cognitive developmenten
-
Keyword(s)higher educationen
-
Keyword(s)critical thinkingen
-
Keyword(s)Bayesian statisticsen
-
Keyword(s)coursetaking breadthen
-
Dewey Decimal Classification number(s)150
-
TitleCognitive Development in Undergraduate Emerging Adults: How Course-Taking Breadth Supports Skill Formationen
-
DRO typepreprinten