Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Peer discussion increases comprehension

This study reported in the Jan. 2, 2009 issue of Science by Smith et al at the University of Colorado, may offer ideas and hope for promoting student learning in lectures. Here's the abstract:
"When students answer an in-class conceptual question individually using clickers, discuss it with their neighbors, and then revote on the same question, the percentage of correct answers typically increases. This outcome could result from gains in understanding during discussion, or simply from peer influence of knowledgeable students on their neighbors. To distinguish between these alternatives in an undergraduate genetics course, we followed the above exercise with a second, similar (isomorphic) question on the same concept that students answered individually. Our results indicate that peer discussion enhances understanding, even when none of the students in a discussion group originally knows the correct answer."
(M.K.Smith, W.B. Wood, W.K. Adams, C. Wieman, J.K. Knight, N. Guild, T.T. Su. Why peer discussion improves student performance on in-class concept questions. Science 2 January 2009:Vol. 323. no. 5910, pp. 122 - 124)
If you have trouble with the link, you can go through the Journals tab on the Libraries homepage to get to our electronic subscription to Science.


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