Quantitative Measure of Student Retention of Information in Human Anatomy and Physiology

Jewel Daniel
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Abstract

Retention of information is essential for transfer of knowledge from one course to another. Human anatomy and physiology (A&P), offered as a 2-semester course at Notre Dame of Maryland University, is a foundational prerequisite for many health-related programs. For this study the researcher attempted to quantify the knowledge retention decline in the transition from human A&P I to human A&P II. Two cohorts of female traditional college students were administered a cumulative final exam immediately on completion of human A&P I. One cohort (CS1) was given the same test 48 days later. A second cohort (CS2) was given the same test 48 days and 144 days later. There was a significant decline in retention of information in CS1, however, CS2 exhibited no significant decline at either 48 days or 144 days. Interestingly, there was no significant difference between both cohorts on the initial test, an indication that both cohorts were equivalently prepared. Further study is required to understand the disparity in retention decline between the 2 cohorts.
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人体解剖学和生理学中学生记忆信息的定量测量
信息的保留对于知识从一门课程转移到另一门课程是必不可少的。人体解剖学和生理学(A&P)是马里兰大学圣母大学(Notre Dame of Maryland University)开设的两学期课程,是许多健康相关课程的基础先决条件。在本研究中,研究者试图量化从人类A&P I到人类A&P II过渡过程中的知识保留下降。两组传统女大学生在完成人类a&p课程后立即进行累积期末考试。其中一组(CS1)在48天后进行相同的测试。第二组(CS2)在48天和144天后进行相同的测试。CS1的信息保留显著下降,而CS2在48天和144天均无显著下降。有趣的是,在初始测试中,两个队列之间没有显着差异,这表明两个队列的准备是相同的。需要进一步的研究来理解这两个队列之间留存率下降的差异。
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