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A longitudinal study in learning preferences and academic performance in first year medical school
Authors:Yenya Hu  Hong Gao  Marcia M Wofford  Claudio Violato
Institution:1. Department of Internal Medicine, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston‐Salem, North Carolina;2. Division of Pediatric Hematology, Department of Pediatrics, Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston‐Salem, North Carolina;3. School of Medicine, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota
Abstract:This is a longitudinal study of first year medical students that investigates the relationship between the pattern change of the learning preferences and academic performance. Using the visual, auditory, reading‐writing, and kinesthetic inventory at the beginning of the first and second year for the same class, it was found that within the first year, 36% of the class remained unimodal (single) modality learners (SS), 14% changed from unimodal to multimodality learners (SM), 27% changed from multimodality to unimodal modality learners (MS) and 21% remained as multimodality learners (MM). Among the academic performance through subsequent didactic blocks from Clinical Anatomy, Cell and Subcellular Processes to Medical Neuroscience during first year, the SM group made more significant improvement compared to the SS group. Semi‐structured interview results from the SM group showed that students made this transition between the Clinical Anatomy course and the middle of the Medical Neuroscience course, in an effort to improve their performance. This study suggests that the transition from unimodal to multimodality learning among academically struggling students improved their academic performance in the first year of medical school. Therefore, this may be considered as part of academic advising tools for struggling students to improve their academic performances. Anat Sci Educ 11: 488–495. © 2017 American Association of Anatomists.
Keywords:medical education  gross anatomy education  neuroanatomy education  cell biology education  learning preference  academically struggling students  longitudinal assessment  academic performance
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