| Literature DB >> 28232588 |
Katelyn M Cooper1, Michael Ashley1, Sara E Brownell2.
Abstract
National calls to improve student academic success in college have sparked the development of bridge programs designed to help students transition from high school to college. We designed a 2-week Summer Bridge program that taught introductory biology content in an active-learning way. Through a set of exploratory interviews, we unexpectedly identified that Bridge students had developed sophisticated views of active learning, even though this was not an explicit goal of the program. We conducted an additional set of semistructured interviews that focused on active learning and compared the interviews of Bridge students with those from non-Bridge students who had been eligible for but did not participate in the program. We used the constant comparative method to identify themes from the interviews. We found that Bridge students perceived that, because they knew how to approach active learning and viewed it as important, they benefited more from active learning in introductory biology than non-Bridge students. Specifically, Bridge students seemed to be more aware of their own learning gains from participating in active learning. Compared with the majority of non-Bridge students, the majority of Bridge students described using a greater variety of strategies to maximize their experiences in active learning. Finally, in contrast to non-Bridge students, Bridge students indicated that they take an equitable approach to group work. These findings suggest that we may be able to prime students to maximize their own and other's experiences in active learning.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28232588 PMCID: PMC5332043 DOI: 10.1187/cbe.16-05-0161
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CBE Life Sci Educ ISSN: 1931-7913 Impact factor: 3.325
Demographic characteristics of Bridge and non-Bridge students, including student gender, race/ethnicity (described as majority [white or Asian student] or URM [Black, Latin@, or Native American student]) and incoming academic ability score (calculated using student high school GPA or class rank and SAT or ACT score)
| Gender | Race/ethnicity | Average academic ability score | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bridge students | 65% female; 35% male | 61% URM; 39% majority | 99 |
| Non-Bridge students | 100% female | 63% URM; 37% majority | 101 |
Strategies to maximize active learning that were reported by the majority Bridge students or the majority of Bridge and non-Bridge studentsa
| Active-learning strategy | Description of active-learning strategy | Reported by the majority of Bridge students | Reported by the majority of non-Bridge students | Example student quote |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Asking questions for clarification or superficial understanding | Students ask instructors, teaching assistants, and other students to clarify superficial concepts or instructions. This category includes students asking another student for the correct answer to determine whether their own answer is correct. This category does not include students asking probing questions to learn more deeply. | ✓ | ✓ | Christine (non-Bridge): If we didn’t understand the activity or we weren’t accomplishing it right, we’d just ask our other group members. |
| Leading or delegating during group work | Students take on a leadership role during group work, which they described as initiating working on an activity as a group and/or delegating tasks to other students. | ✓ | ✓ | Emma (non-Bridge): If [a student] doesn’t know how to do part of the work, you can show them how to do one part of it, and be like “OK, now you do the whole thing, and I’ll go work on the other stuff.” It helps you out, saves time, so you can get other stuff done. |
| Encouraging other students to participate in active learning to benefit oneself | Students actively engage others in active learning and group work to hear what another student thought in order to incorporate that student’s feedback and contribution for their own learning. | ✓ | ✓ | Jasmine (Bridge): I get everyone else’s input and different ideas. I think the biggest thing is different ideas. You learn something new, you have one set of ideas, sometimes everyone has their own set and then someone else brings a new set and you are like “Wow! That’s interesting!” |
| Being open-minded/optimistic when approaching active learning or group work | Students intentionally approach active learning or group work with a positive attitude. | ✓ | Lauren (Bridge): If you go into [active learning] and you think “I’m not going to get anything out of this,” you’re probably not going to get anything out of it. If you go into it and you think “This is what will help me study or retain information best,” I think it actually helps you retain it even better. | |
| Intentionally sharing thoughts and ideas with others | Students purposefully make their voices heard during group discussion. Students mentioned intentionally contributing to group discussion in order to enhance the quality of conversation. | ✓ | Joseph (Bridge): Now I do speak up more with my opinion. When we had to work in groups, there was another kid who was trying to take control and be like, “This is what we should do.” I was like, “Well that’s also a good plan, but we could also incorporate this idea.” Without Bridge and getting comfortable with sharing my ideas, I probably would’ve just sat back and like, “OK just tell me the work I need to do” instead of giving my own opinion on what we could do. | |
| Deeply engaging in active learning | Students deeply engage in activities as opposed to superficially participating. Students often contrast engaging in active learning in order to learn with completing an activity solely to get course points. | ✓ | Jamie (Bridge): I think more logically, and not as superficial[ly]. I tend to try and dive in instead of stay on the outside. By dive in I mean I try and find every single thing that I can, instead of like, “Here’s the answer, OK I’m done.” | |
| Encouraging other students to participate in active learning to benefit the other students | Students actively engage other students in active learning and group work in order to specifically enhance the other students’ understanding of a concept or experience in active learning. | ✓ | Gloria (Bridge): I’ll talk with other students and say “I think this, what do you think? What do you think if I put this down? Should we add anything? Do you want to check it?” Just to get them to think. Just to get them talking so hopefully they can contribute. |
aDescription of strategies were reported out by either the majority (at least 50%) of Bridge students or the majority of both Bridge and non-Bridge students. A representative student quote is provided for each strategy.
Three equity-related themes emerged from the interviews and were held by either only Bridge students or only non-Bridge students
| Equity-related theme | Only held by Bridge students | Only held by non-Bridge students |
|---|---|---|
| Student deficit model of group-mate participation | ✓ | |
| Responsibility to help other students learn | ✓ | |
| Monitoring equity during group work | ✓ |