Resource use and academic performance among first year psychology students

Multiple questionnaires completed over the semester by 514 students enrolled in a first year psychology course reveal that no single pattern of reliance on print, online, or in-person resources guarantees a high mark. Analyses of the reported and measured frequency of use of various resources correlated against students’, performance on both individual assessments and their final marks suggests that students employ a range of strategies in their use of class resources. They tend to rely on their textbooks, Web-based lecture notes, and online quizzes, but their final marks are more strongly determined by their university entrance scores than by their resource use strategy, their sex, or whether or not English is their first language. The data suggest that students adapt their learning strategies to the resources available, with an apparent emphasis on learning what will be assessed rather than exploring for understanding. Importantly, the results argue that investment in development of educational technologies – and students’, use of educational technologies – must be informed by empirical data concerning its impact on the efficiency and quality of learning.

[1]  P. Lawther,et al.  An evaluation of a distributed learning system , 2001 .

[2]  Herbert S. Lin,et al.  They’re Not Dumb, They’re Different: Stalking the Second Tier , 1991 .

[3]  Carol Jollie,et al.  Web based learning , 2003, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[4]  J. Biggs Enhancing teaching through constructive alignment , 1996 .

[5]  Heidi S Chumley-Jones,et al.  Web‐based Learning: Sound Educational Method or Hype? A Review of the Evaluation Literature , 2002, Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges.

[6]  Terence J. Crooks,et al.  Student note-taking related to university examination performance , 1984 .

[7]  Carla H. Lagorio,et al.  Psychology , 1929, Nature.

[8]  Synnöve Kekkonen-Moneta,et al.  E-Learning in Hong Kong: comparing learning outcomes in online multimedia and lecture versions of an introductory computing course , 2002, Br. J. Educ. Technol..

[9]  Linda S. Norton The Effects of Notetaking and Subsequent Use on Long‐term Recall , 1981 .

[11]  James Hartley,et al.  What factors contribute to good examination marks? , 1986 .

[12]  Robert J. Beichner,et al.  Comparison of Student Performance Using Web and Paper-Based Homework in College-Level Physics , 2003 .

[13]  Barry Harper,et al.  ICT in higher education: evaluating outcomes for health education , 2001, J. Comput. Assist. Learn..

[14]  D Richardson Student perceptions and learning outcomes of computer-assisted versus traditional instruction in physiology. , 1997, The American journal of physiology.

[15]  Evaluating Flexible Learning: A Case Study , 1994 .

[16]  R. Clark Evidence for confounding in computer-based instruction studies: Analyzing the meta-analyses , 1985 .

[17]  R. Clark Reconsidering Research on Learning from Media , 1983 .

[18]  T E Piemme,et al.  Computer-assisted learning and evaluation in medicine. , 1988, JAMA.