Franklin Brandon M, Xiang Lin, Collett Jason A, Rhoads Megan K, Osborn Jeffrey L
Department of Biology, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky.
Department of Biology, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky
Adv Physiol Educ. 2015 Dec;39(4):327-34. doi: 10.1152/advan.00082.2015.
Student populations are diverse such that different types of learners struggle with traditional didactic instruction. Problem-based learning has existed for several decades, but there is still controversy regarding the optimal mode of instruction to ensure success at all levels of students' past achievement. The present study addressed this problem by dividing students into the following three instructional groups for an upper-level course in animal physiology: traditional lecture-style instruction (LI), guided problem-based instruction (GPBI), and open problem-based instruction (OPBI). Student performance was measured by three summative assessments consisting of 50% multiple-choice questions and 50% short-answer questions as well as a final overall course assessment. The present study also examined how students of different academic achievement histories performed under each instructional method. When student achievement levels were not considered, the effects of instructional methods on student outcomes were modest; OPBI students performed moderately better on short-answer exam questions than both LI and GPBI groups. High-achieving students showed no difference in performance for any of the instructional methods on any metric examined. In students with low-achieving academic histories, OPBI students largely outperformed LI students on all metrics (short-answer exam: P < 0.05, d = 1.865; multiple-choice question exam: P < 0.05, d = 1.166; and final score: P < 0.05, d = 1.265). They also outperformed GPBI students on short-answer exam questions (P < 0.05, d = 1.109) but not multiple-choice exam questions (P = 0.071, d = 0.716) or final course outcome (P = 0.328, d = 0.513). These findings strongly suggest that typically low-achieving students perform at a higher level under OPBI as long as the proper support systems (formative assessment and scaffolding) are provided to encourage student success.
学生群体具有多样性,以至于不同类型的学习者在传统的讲授式教学中会遇到困难。基于问题的学习已经存在了几十年,但对于确保不同学业水平的学生都能取得成功的最佳教学模式仍存在争议。本研究通过将学生分为以下三个教学组来解决这个问题,这三个教学组针对动物生理学的一门高级课程:传统讲座式教学(LI)、引导式基于问题的教学(GPBI)和开放式基于问题的教学(OPBI)。学生成绩通过三项总结性评估来衡量,这些评估包括50%的多项选择题和50%的简答题,以及最终的整体课程评估。本研究还考察了不同学业成绩历史的学生在每种教学方法下的表现。当不考虑学生成绩水平时,教学方法对学生成绩的影响不大;OPBI组的学生在简答题考试问题上的表现略优于LI组和GPBI组。成绩优异的学生在任何一种教学方法下的任何一项指标上的表现都没有差异。在学业成绩历史较差的学生中,OPBI组的学生在所有指标上的表现都大大优于LI组的学生(简答题考试:P < 0.05,d = 1.865;多项选择题考试:P < 0.05,d = 1.166;最终成绩:P < 0.05,d = 1.265)。他们在简答题考试问题上的表现也优于GPBI组的学生(P < 0.05,d = 1.109),但在多项选择题考试问题上(P = 0.071,d = 0.716)或最终课程成绩上(P = 0.328,d = 0.513)没有优势。这些发现强烈表明,只要提供适当的支持系统(形成性评估和支架)以鼓励学生取得成功,通常成绩较差的学生在OPBI教学模式下会有更高水平的表现。