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Student Preclass Preparation by Both Reading the Textbook and Watching Videos Online Improves Exam Performance in a Partially Flipped Course
CBE Life Sciences Education
  • Kaleb Bassett
  • Gayla R. Olbricht, Missouri University of Science and Technology
  • Katie Shannon, Missouri University of Science and Technology
Abstract

The flipped classroom has the potential to improve student performance. Because flipping involves both preclass preparation and problem solving in the classroom, the means by which increased learning occurs and whether the method of delivering content matters is of interest. In a partially flipped cell biology course, students were assigned online videos before the flipped class and textbook reading before lectures. Low-stakes assessments were used to incentivize both types of preclass preparation. We hypothesized that more students would watch the videos than read the textbook and that both types of preparation would positively affect exam performance. A multiple linear regression analysis showed that both reading and video viewing had a significant positive impact on exam score, and this model was predictive of exam scores. In contrast to our expectations, most students prepared by both watching videos and reading the textbook and did not exhibit a pattern of solely watching videos. This analysis supports previous findings that engagement with material outside class is partly responsible for the improved outcomes in a flipped classroom and shows that both reading and watching videos are effective at delivering content outside class.

Department(s)
Mathematics and Statistics
Second Department
Biological Sciences
Research Center/Lab(s)
Center for High Performance Computing Research
Comments

K.B.S. would like to acknowledge support from Missouri S&T EdTech office and staff for assistance with producing, editing, and closed-captioning of flipped video lectures. This effort was supported in part by multiple campus grants to support course redesign and educational research: eFellows Program grants from the Missouri S&T Provost office and Educational Technology, “Design of a ‘Flipped’ Cell Biology Course” and “Redevelopment and Enhancement of Cellular Biology,” an educational research mini-grant from Missouri S&T Center for Educational Research and Teaching Innovation (CERTI) “Do Flipped Lectures Increase Student Engagement with Course Material?,” and funding from Missouri S&T Center for Advancing Faculty Excellence (CAFE) for publishing results from past mini-grants award.

Document Type
Article - Journal
Document Version
Final Version
File Type
text
Language(s)
English
Rights
© 2020 The Authors, All rights reserved.
Creative Commons Licensing
Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0
Publication Date
9-1-2020
Publication Date
01 Sep 2020
PubMed ID
32720842
Citation Information
Kaleb Bassett, Gayla R. Olbricht and Katie Shannon. "Student Preclass Preparation by Both Reading the Textbook and Watching Videos Online Improves Exam Performance in a Partially Flipped Course" CBE Life Sciences Education Vol. 19 Iss. 3 (2020) p. 1 - 9 ISSN: 1931-7913
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/gayla-olbricht/57/