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Does A Self‐Paced, Fixed‐Time, Laboratory Examination Improve Anxiety and Performance among Undergraduate Students?
Author(s) -
Bentley Danielle Christine
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
the faseb journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.709
H-Index - 277
eISSN - 1530-6860
pISSN - 0892-6638
DOI - 10.1096/fasebj.2018.32.1_supplement.lb511
Subject(s) - anxiety , test anxiety , cohort , test (biology) , psychology , final examination , medical education , clinical psychology , physical therapy , medicine , psychiatry , paleontology , biology
The use of the traditional laboratory examination structure for the evaluation of student knowledge has a long history of success in anatomical education. Various professional and graduate level programs have recently experimented with self‐paced (SP) versus belled‐paced (BP) laboratory examination structures, revealing that students typically prefer SP as this reduces test anxiety while producing comparable performance (knowledge) outcomes. Such success among more senior level students in completing the SP structure may depend on one's ability to self‐monitor and self‐regulate progression through the examination in order to ensure sufficient timing for all stations. It is currently unknown if an SP examination structure would also benefit more junior undergraduate students. Using a randomized cross‐over design this research evaluated the impact of an SP vs. BP laboratory examination structure on student anxiety and student performance. Undergraduate students (n=20) in an advanced dissection course completed both a midterm (31 specimen stations with A/B split questions arranged as a “staircase” with 4 equally spaced rest stations) and a final laboratory examination (details tbd). For the midterm students were randomly assigned to one of two cohorts; the SP cohort (n=10) or the BP cohort (n=10). Both cohorts received 35 total minutes. Test anxiety was measured pre‐ and post‐examination using a modified State‐Trait Anxiety Inventory (out of 60). Differences in test performance and change in anxiety level pre‐ to post‐ examination were compared using unpaired t‐tests. Student perceptions of the examination structure were collected via open‐ended feedback and qualitatively assessed. From the midterm results, student performance was similar between examination structures (SP: 84.9 ± 10.2%, BP: 88.6 ± 6.4%, p > 0.05). Interesting trends have begun to emerge as the SP cohort experienced both greater pre‐exam anxiety and reduced post‐exam anxiety as compared to the BP cohort, resulting in near significant pre‐ to post‐ change scores (SP: +5.4 ± 9.5, BP: −3.3 ± 10.8, p = 0.071). Open‐ended feedback revealed that students consistently reported the SP structure to be “stressful” due to both i) aspects of having to self‐monitor timing throughout the examination and ii) aspects of students being “back‐logged” against each other. Further results collected from the final examination, when the SP and BP cohorts cross‐over, will provide additional statistical power and qualitative comparisons of the SP and BP structures. This preliminary pilot study work reveals that undergraduate students completing a SP laboratory examination, with its current design, may not experience the reduced student‐anxiety levels that professional students experience. In fact, the BP examination structure may be ideal for more junior learners as it provides explicit direction and guidance. This abstract is from the Experimental Biology 2018 Meeting. There is no full text article associated with this abstract published in The FASEB Journal .

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