1. Evaluating the Impact of Supplemental Instruction on Short- and Long-Term Retention of Course Content.
- Author
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Price, Jodi, Lumpkin, Amber G., Seemann, Eric A., and Bell, Diana Calhoun
- Subjects
COURSE content (Education) ,SCHOOL dropout prevention ,CURRICULUM ,PSYCHOLOGY students ,SCHOOL attendance - Abstract
Findings from prior research in various content domains have indicated that Peer Assisted Study Sessions (PASS) attendees earned higher final grades than non-attendees. However, what makes PASS effective remains unknown; for example, PASS could improve short-term retention but hinder long-term maintenance of course content given that some methods that facilitate short- term retention of information hurt long-term retention. Of additional interest was what predicts students' attendance in PASS. We tracked 75 introductory psychology students' short- and long-term retention of course content via unit quizzes and a cumulative final exam, respectively, to determine if PASS attendance improved both types of retention. Results indicated that PASS attendees had significantly higher academic self-efficacy and final grades than non-attendees. Attendees outperformed non-attendees on three of the six quizzes and on the cumulative final exam, supporting both the short- and long-term effectiveness of PASS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012