Abstract

BackgroundUnderutilization of dialogue among students during small-group work is a threat to active meaningful learning. To encourage small-group learning, we challenged students to generate written questions during a small-group work session. As gender differences have been shown to affect learning, these were also inventoried.MethodsProspective randomized study during a bachelor General Pathology course including 459 (bio) medical students, 315 females and 144 males. The intervention was to individually generate an extra written question on disease mechanisms, followed by a selection, by each student group, of the two questions considered to be most relevant. These selected questions were open for discussion during the subsequent interactive lecture. Outcome measure was the score on tumour pathology (range 1–10) on the course examination; the effect of gender was assessed.ResultsThe mean score per student was 7.2 (intervention) and 6.9 (control; p = 0.22). Male students in the intervention group scored 0.5 point higher than controls (p = 0.05). In female students, this was only 0.1 point higher (p = 0.75).ConclusionsFormulating and prioritizing an extra written question during small-group work seems to exert a positive learning effect on male students. This is an interesting approach to improve learning in male students, as they generally tend to perform less well than their female colleagues.

Highlights

  • Underutilization of dialogue among students during small-group work is a threat to active meaningful learning

  • Active meaningful learning is supposed to play a central role in medical education, especially during small-group work (SGW) sessions and interactive lectures

  • It is interesting to explore whether challenging students to generate written questions and prioritize them during a SGW session of an ongoing medical course would be effective as a strategy to improve learning performance

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Summary

Introduction

Underutilization of dialogue among students during small-group work is a threat to active meaningful learning. Active meaningful learning is supposed to play a central role in medical education, especially during small-group work (SGW) sessions and interactive lectures. Students learn effectively, and knowledge is retained longer when they are able to engage in active learning [2,3] The quality of such small-group dialogue is crucial to. It is interesting to explore whether challenging students to generate written questions and prioritize them during a SGW session of an ongoing (bio) medical course would be effective as a strategy to improve learning performance. As the motivation of female (bio) medical students for learning may be of a different nature (intrinsic versus extrinsic) than that of their male peers [19], gender differences in the effect of the intervention might be present as well. Females generally have higher intrinsic motivation, implicating that they are genuinely interested and curious to learn more about the topic

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