Impact of Students’ Class Attendance on Recalling Previously Acquired Information

Background: In recent years, availability of class material including typed lectures, the professor’s Power Point slides, sound recordings, and even videos made a group of students feel that it is unnecessary to attend the classes. These students usually read and memorize typed lectures within two o...

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Main Authors: Camellia Hemyari, Kamiar Zomorodian, Ali Sahraian, Zahra Mardani, Bahador Sarkari, Nastaran Ahmadi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Shaheed Beheshti University of Medical Sciences and Health Services 2018-03-01
Series:Journal of Medical Education
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.sbmu.ac.ir/jme/article/view/17247
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spelling doaj-64d2a0447b7b4d9b8db3d941c4d9bb212020-11-24T23:49:39ZengShaheed Beheshti University of Medical Sciences and Health ServicesJournal of Medical Education1735-39981735-40052018-03-0116410.22037/jme.v16i4.1724710281Impact of Students’ Class Attendance on Recalling Previously Acquired InformationCamellia Hemyari0Kamiar Zomorodian1Ali Sahraian2Zahra Mardani3Bahador Sarkari4Nastaran Ahmadi5Department of Psychiatry, School of Medicine, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, IranBasic Research in Infectious Diseases Research Center, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, IranResearch Center for Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, IranShiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, IranBasic Research in Infectious Diseases Research Center, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, IranYazd Cardiovascular Research Center, Afshar Hospital, Jomhouri Boulevard, Yazd, IranBackground: In recent years, availability of class material including typed lectures, the professor’s Power Point slides, sound recordings, and even videos made a group of students feel that it is unnecessary to attend the classes. These students usually read and memorize typed lectures within two or three days prior to the exams and usually pass the tests even with low attendance rate. Thus, the question is how effective is this learning system and how long the one-night memorized lessons may last.<br />Methods: A group of medical students (62 out of 106 students), with their class attendance and educational achievements in the Medical Mycology and Parasitology course being recorded since two years ago, was selected and their knowledge about this course was tested by multiple choice questions (MCQ) designed based on the previous lectures.<br />Results: Although the mean re-exam score of the students at the end of the externship was lower than the corresponding final score, a significant association was found between the scores of the students in these two exams (r=0.48, P=0.01). Moreover, a significant negative association was predicted between the number of absences and re-exam scores (r=-0.26, P=0.037).<br />Conclusion: As our findings show, the phenomenon of recalling the acquired lessons is preserved for a long period of time and it is associated with the students’ attendance. Many factors including generation effect (by taking notes) and cued-recall (via slide picture) might play a significant role in the better recalling of the learned information in students with good class attendance.<br />Keywords: STUDENT, MEMORY, LONG-TERM, RECALL, ABSENTEEISM, LEARNINGhttp://journals.sbmu.ac.ir/jme/article/view/17247STUDENT, MEMORY, LONG-TERM, RECALL, ABSENTEEISM, LEARNING
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Camellia Hemyari
Kamiar Zomorodian
Ali Sahraian
Zahra Mardani
Bahador Sarkari
Nastaran Ahmadi
spellingShingle Camellia Hemyari
Kamiar Zomorodian
Ali Sahraian
Zahra Mardani
Bahador Sarkari
Nastaran Ahmadi
Impact of Students’ Class Attendance on Recalling Previously Acquired Information
Journal of Medical Education
STUDENT, MEMORY, LONG-TERM, RECALL, ABSENTEEISM, LEARNING
author_facet Camellia Hemyari
Kamiar Zomorodian
Ali Sahraian
Zahra Mardani
Bahador Sarkari
Nastaran Ahmadi
author_sort Camellia Hemyari
title Impact of Students’ Class Attendance on Recalling Previously Acquired Information
title_short Impact of Students’ Class Attendance on Recalling Previously Acquired Information
title_full Impact of Students’ Class Attendance on Recalling Previously Acquired Information
title_fullStr Impact of Students’ Class Attendance on Recalling Previously Acquired Information
title_full_unstemmed Impact of Students’ Class Attendance on Recalling Previously Acquired Information
title_sort impact of students’ class attendance on recalling previously acquired information
publisher Shaheed Beheshti University of Medical Sciences and Health Services
series Journal of Medical Education
issn 1735-3998
1735-4005
publishDate 2018-03-01
description Background: In recent years, availability of class material including typed lectures, the professor’s Power Point slides, sound recordings, and even videos made a group of students feel that it is unnecessary to attend the classes. These students usually read and memorize typed lectures within two or three days prior to the exams and usually pass the tests even with low attendance rate. Thus, the question is how effective is this learning system and how long the one-night memorized lessons may last.<br />Methods: A group of medical students (62 out of 106 students), with their class attendance and educational achievements in the Medical Mycology and Parasitology course being recorded since two years ago, was selected and their knowledge about this course was tested by multiple choice questions (MCQ) designed based on the previous lectures.<br />Results: Although the mean re-exam score of the students at the end of the externship was lower than the corresponding final score, a significant association was found between the scores of the students in these two exams (r=0.48, P=0.01). Moreover, a significant negative association was predicted between the number of absences and re-exam scores (r=-0.26, P=0.037).<br />Conclusion: As our findings show, the phenomenon of recalling the acquired lessons is preserved for a long period of time and it is associated with the students’ attendance. Many factors including generation effect (by taking notes) and cued-recall (via slide picture) might play a significant role in the better recalling of the learned information in students with good class attendance.<br />Keywords: STUDENT, MEMORY, LONG-TERM, RECALL, ABSENTEEISM, LEARNING
topic STUDENT, MEMORY, LONG-TERM, RECALL, ABSENTEEISM, LEARNING
url http://journals.sbmu.ac.ir/jme/article/view/17247
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