Authors
David Gross, Evava S Pietri, Gordon Anderson, Karin Moyano-Camihort, Mark J Graham
Publication date
2015/12
Journal
CBE—Life Sciences Education
Volume
14
Issue
4
Pages
ar36
Publisher
American Society for Cell Biology
Description
Active-learning environments such as those found in a flipped classroom are known to increase student performance, although how these gains are realized over the course of a semester is less well understood. In an upper-level lecture course designed primarily for biochemistry majors, we examine how students attain improved learning outcomes, as measured by exam scores, when the course is converted to a more active flipped format. The context is a physical chemistry course catering to life science majors in which approximately half of the lecture material is placed online and in-class problem-solving activities are increased, while total class time is reduced. We find that exam performance significantly improves by nearly 12% in the flipped-format course, due in part to students interacting with course material in a more timely and accurate manner. We also find that the positive effects of the flipped class are …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
D Gross, ES Pietri, G Anderson, K Moyano-Camihort… - CBE—Life Sciences Education, 2015