概念映射作为元认知工具在以问题解决为基础的BME课程中的应用。

Biomedical engineering education Pub Date : 2022-01-01 Epub Date: 2022-03-15 DOI:10.1007/s43683-022-00066-3
Rucha Joshi, Dustin Hadley, Saivageethi Nuthikattu, Shierly Fok, Leora Goldbloom-Helzner, Matthew Curtis
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引用次数: 5

摘要

元认知技能对学习工程课程的学生有巨大的好处。不幸的是,这些元认知技能往往落在大多数课程的内容领域之外,因此,它们经常在教学中被忽视。在此背景下,以往关于概念映射作为一种教学策略的研究指向有意义的学习。这篇创新论文的目的是报告概念映射的应用(1)促进学生的元认知步骤,以及(2)在基于问题解决的生物医学工程课程的面对面和在线教学中,识别学生最困惑的点。这篇创新文章还通过教师和学生的认知以及学生的课堂表现来研究概念映射的有用性。整个概念映射干预是在2019年春季现场季度的8-10周以及2021年春季在线季度的3-4周和8-10周进行的。练习包括概念映射,解释和与同伴讨论,以及回答结构化的反思提示。每个概念图活动都被语境化到修订后的Bloom分类法的元认知知识领域。完成概念图的学生与未完成概念图的学生之间的平均课堂表现进行比较,使用t检验和α = 0.05显著性水平的单向方差分析,然后进行Tukey HSD检验。在概念图干预后,对学生的概念图和报告的答案进行定性分析。在2019年春季面对面教学期间,59.30%的学生完成了带反思的概念图,而在2021年春季在线教学中,47.67%的学生完成了概念图。双尾非配对t检验表明,概念映射在面对面教学和在线教学中都没有显著提高学生的课堂表现(p > 0.05)。同学对学生改进概念图的建议揭示了与课程概念、先决条件概念和概念图行为本身相关的主题。概念图在揭示课程中最混乱的地方是有效的。无论是面对面教学还是在线教学,概念映射都没有显著提高学生的课堂表现(2019年面对面教学季度的效应值为0.29,2021年在线教学季度的效应值为0.33)。然而,教师和学生的认知反映出,在以问题解决为基础的生物医学工程课程中,无论是在面对面教学还是在线教学中,概念映射都促进了元认知。大多数学生(78%)对概念映射在这门课程中的有用性持乐观态度,84%倾向于将其应用于各种其他课程。补充资料:在线版本包含补充资料,下载地址:10.1007/s43683-022-00066-3。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Concept Mapping as a Metacognition Tool in a Problem-Solving-Based BME Course During In-Person and Online Instruction.

Metacognitive skills can have enormous benefits for students within engineering courses. Unfortunately, these metacognitive skills tend to fall outside the content area of most courses, and consequently, they can often be neglected in instruction. In this context, previous research on concept mapping as a teaching strategy points to meaningful learning. The purpose of this innovation paper is to report an application of concept mapping (1) to facilitate metacognition steps in students, and (2) to identify the muddiest points students struggle with, during both in-person and online instruction of a problem-solving-based biomedical engineering course. This innovation article also looks at the usefulness of concept mapping through instructor and student perceptions and students' class performance. The entire concept mapping intervention was conducted during weeks 8-10 of the Spring 2019 in-person quarter and during weeks 3-4 and 8-10 of the Spring 2021 online quarter. The exercise involved concept mapping, explanation and discussion with peers, and answering structured reflection prompts. Each concept map activity was contextualized to the metacognitive knowledge domain of the revised Bloom's taxonomy. The average class performance was compared between students who completed concept mapping vs. those who did not, using a t-test and one-way ANOVA at alpha = 0.05 significance level followed by a Tukey HSD test. Students' concept maps and reported answers were analyzed qualitatively following the concept mapping intervention. During the Spring 2019 in-person quarter, 59.30% of students completed concept mapping with reflection, whereas 47.67% completed it in spring 2021 online instruction. A two-tailed, unpaired t-test indicated that concept mapping did not significantly enhance students' class performance (p > 0.05) within each of the in-person and online instructions. Peers' suggestions to students to improve concept maps revealed themes related to course concepts, prerequisite concepts, and the act of concept mapping itself. Concept mapping was effective in revealing the muddiest points of the course. Concept mapping did not significantly enhance students' class performance either in-person or online instruction (effect sizes were 0.29 for the 2019 in-person quarter and 0.33 for the 2021 online quarter). However, instructors and students' perceptions reflected that concept mapping facilitated metacognition in a problem-solving-based biomedical engineering course both during in-person and online instruction. Most students (78%) were optimistic about the usefulness of concept mapping for this course, and 84% were inclined to apply it for a variety of other courses.

Supplementary information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s43683-022-00066-3.

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