Blenda Anna, Chosed Renee, Bailes Carrie, Caldwell Mary, Tucker Matthew
University of South Carolina School of Medicine Greenville.
MedEdPublish (2016). 2021 Mar 12;10:70. doi: 10.15694/mep.2021.000070.1. eCollection 2021.
This article was migrated. The article was marked as recommended. Introduction Medical students are tasked with learning a vast amount of medical knowledge prior to sitting for the USMLE Step 1 exam, a portion of which is either forgotten or becomes inaccessible to memory following each exam. In this study we examined whether accessibility and retention of 1 -year biochemistry content predicts performance on high stakes exams such as USMLE Step1. Methods First-year medical students were retested on a subset of biochemistry final exam items 10.5 months after sitting for the original exam. Retention was measured as a percentage of the original final exam score. Availability of information was measured with cued recall (i.e., selecting from a list the multiple-choice distractors), while accessibility of information was captured through free recall (without the aid of multiple choice distractors). Results As expected, we found that free recall rates were much lower than cued recall rates, but that students who scored higher on Step 1 had a smaller gap between cued and free recall scores, demonstrating a greater ability to access information than lower-scoring students. Importantly, we also demonstrate that higher-scoring students retained a higher percentage of the original biochemistry material than lower-performing students after 10.5 months, and that the amount information retained in memory was associated with higher scores on Step 1, demonstrating the potential importance of teaching medical school content with the intention of , especially in students who are not as strong academically. Conclusion The methods employed in this study are straightforward and can be used to compare retention and accessibility of information across medical school courses, and may serve as a guide to curriculum and pedagogical improvements.
本文已迁移。该文章被标记为推荐文章。引言 医学生在参加美国医师执照考试第一步(USMLE Step 1)之前,需要学习大量医学知识,其中一部分知识在每次考试后要么被遗忘,要么难以回忆起来。在本研究中,我们考察了一年期生物化学内容的可获取性和记忆保持情况是否能预测像USMLE Step1这样的高风险考试的成绩。方法 一年级医学生在参加完最初的考试10.5个月后,对生物化学期末考试部分试题进行重新测试。记忆保持情况以原始期末考试成绩的百分比来衡量。信息的可获得性通过线索回忆(即从列表中选择多项选择题的干扰项)来测量,而信息的可获取性则通过自由回忆(不借助多项选择题干扰项)来获取。结果 正如预期的那样,我们发现自由回忆率远低于线索回忆率,但在USMLE Step 1中得分较高的学生,其线索回忆分数与自由回忆分数之间的差距较小,这表明他们比得分较低的学生有更强的信息获取能力。重要的是,我们还证明,在10.5个月后,高分学生比成绩较差的学生保留了更高比例的原始生物化学材料,并且记忆中保留的信息量与USMLE Step 1中的更高分数相关,这表明以增强记忆为目的教授医学院课程内容具有潜在的重要性,尤其是对于学业能力不是很强的学生。结论 本研究中采用的方法很简单,可用于比较医学院各课程中信息的记忆保持情况和可获取性,并且可能为课程和教学改进提供指导。