The impact of learning modality on team-based learning (TBL) outcomes in anatomical sciences education
Data files
Jul 21, 2020 version files 37.28 KB
-
Data_Uploaded.sav
37.28 KB
Abstract
Team-based learning (TBL) is an instructional methodology that has been increasingly used in anatomy and physiology education in recent years. The appropriateness of TBL methods for students with diverse preferred sensory learning modalities has not been adequately examined. This study aimed to show the influence of students preferred sensory modality for learning on TBL and traditional academic outcome measures (tests, assignments, etc.). 157 American undergraduate Communication Sciences and Disorders students taking anatomy and physiology courses took the VARK, a questionnaire quantifying their preferred learning modality. These students traditional and TBL measures of academic success were compared by preferred learning modality. A one-way MANOVA failed to find any difference in TBL or other academic outcomes by preferred learning modality (p = .252). The results of this study support the effectiveness of TBL methods for undergraduate students regardless of what sensory mode they prefer to receive information
Data was prepared and analyzed using IBM SPSS statistical package version 26 (IBM SPSS Statistics, 2019) and R version 3.6.3 (R Core Team, 2020). Multiple imputation was used to impute missing values in the data using the mice package version 3.9.0 in R version 3.6.3, see article for details.
- Otto, Christian et al. (2022), SaL-Lightning Dataset: Search and Eye Gaze Behavior, Resource Interactions and Knowledge Gain during Web Search, ACM SIGIR Conference on Human Information Interaction and Retrieval, Proceedings-article, https://doi.org/10.1145/3498366.3505835
