TY - JOUR
T1 - Learning Introductory Biology
T2 - Students’ Concept-Building Approaches Predict Transfer on Biology Exams
AU - McDaniel, Mark A.
AU - Cahill, Michael J.
AU - Frey, Regina F.
AU - Limeri, Lisa B.
AU - Lemons, Paula P.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 M. A. McDaniel et al.
PY - 2022/12/1
Y1 - 2022/12/1
N2 - Previous studies have found that students’ concept-building approaches, identified a pri-ori with a cognitive psychology laboratory task, are associated with student exam perfor-mances in chemistry classes. Abstraction learners (those who extract the principles un-derlying related examples) performed better than exemplar learners (those who focus on memorizing the training exemplars and responses) on transfer exam questions but not retention questions, after accounting for general ability. We extended these findings to introductory biology courses in which active-learning techniques were used to try to foster deep conceptual learning. Exams were constructed to contain both transfer and retention questions. Abstraction learners demonstrated better performance than exemplar learners on the transfer questions but not on the retention questions. These results were not moderated by indices of crystallized or fluid intelligence. Our central interpretation is that students identified as abstraction learners appear to construct a deep understanding of the concepts (presumably based on abstract underpinnings), thereby enabling them to apply and generalize the concepts to scenarios and instantiations not seen during instruction (transfer questions). By contrast, other students appear to base their representations on memorized instructed examples, leading to good performance on retention questions but not transfer questions.
AB - Previous studies have found that students’ concept-building approaches, identified a pri-ori with a cognitive psychology laboratory task, are associated with student exam perfor-mances in chemistry classes. Abstraction learners (those who extract the principles un-derlying related examples) performed better than exemplar learners (those who focus on memorizing the training exemplars and responses) on transfer exam questions but not retention questions, after accounting for general ability. We extended these findings to introductory biology courses in which active-learning techniques were used to try to foster deep conceptual learning. Exams were constructed to contain both transfer and retention questions. Abstraction learners demonstrated better performance than exemplar learners on the transfer questions but not on the retention questions. These results were not moderated by indices of crystallized or fluid intelligence. Our central interpretation is that students identified as abstraction learners appear to construct a deep understanding of the concepts (presumably based on abstract underpinnings), thereby enabling them to apply and generalize the concepts to scenarios and instantiations not seen during instruction (transfer questions). By contrast, other students appear to base their representations on memorized instructed examples, leading to good performance on retention questions but not transfer questions.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85138450809
U2 - 10.1187/cbe.21-12-0335
DO - 10.1187/cbe.21-12-0335
M3 - Article
C2 - 36112624
AN - SCOPUS:85138450809
SN - 1931-7913
VL - 21
JO - CBE life sciences education
JF - CBE life sciences education
IS - 4
M1 - ar65
ER -