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Concurrent enrollment in lecture and laboratory enhances student performance and retention
Authors
Angel
Bailey
+79 more
Baker
Banilower
Ben-Zvi
Bowen
Bransford
Bybee
Carnduff
Cavagnetto
Cawley
Chin
Coletta
Committee on Prospering in the Global Economy of the 21st Century
Cooper
Cooper
Cooper
Cooper
Creswell
Daempfle
Daugherty
DiBiase
Driver
Driver
Dubravcic
Fayowski
Feldon
Field
Fincher
Glynn
Goldstein
Heller
Hill
Hoellwarth
Hofstein
Hofstein
Hogan
Horton
Hutcheson
Johnson
Kerner
Lederman
Little
Long
Lumpe
Maltese
Marshall
Martens
McKinney
Meltzer
Minner
National Research Council
National Research Council
National Research Council
National Research Council
Nicoll
Oliver-Hoyo
Pascarella
Paul
Peterfreund
Raghubir
Renner
Richmond
Saunders
Seymour
Shavelson
Springer
Strenta
Teixeira-Dias
Tien
Ting
Totten
Walvoord
Washam
Wheatley
White
Wilson
Wojcik
Wolfe
Wrensford
Zimmerman
Publication date
1 May 2012
Publisher
'Wiley'
Doi
Cite
Abstract
Laboratories have been a cornerstone in teaching and learning across multiple scientific disciplines for more than 100 years. At the collegiate level, science laboratories and their corresponding lectures are often offered as separate courses, and students may not be required to concurrently enroll in both. In this study, we provide evidence that enrolling in an introductory laboratory concurrently with the corresponding lecture course enhances learning gains and retention in comparison to students who enroll in the lecture alone. We examined the impact of concurrent versus nonconcurrent enrollment on 9,438 students' withdrawal rates from and final grades in the general chemistry lecture at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor using multiple linear and binary logistic regression analyses, respectively, at a significance level of 0.05. We found that concurrent enrollment in the lecture and laboratory positively impacts (1) the odds of retention in the lecture by 2.2 times on average and (2) final lecture grades by up to 0.19 grade points on a 4.0 scale for the lowest‐scoring students according to university‐level mathematics and chemistry placement exam scores. These data provide important results for consideration by curriculum advisors and course planners at universities that do not require concurrent enrollment in general chemistry as well as other science courses. In the face of current budget cuts that threaten to shorten or eliminate laboratory experiences altogether at multiple educational levels, this study demonstrates the value of laboratories in promoting science learning and retention. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Res Sci Teach 49: 659–682, 2012Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/91231/1/21016_ftp.pd
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info:doi/10.1002%2Ftea.21016
Last time updated on 20/11/2020
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Last time updated on 25/05/2012