2013
DOI: 10.1007/bf03341646
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Group Testing in Medical Education: An Assessment of Group Dynamics, Student Acceptance, and Effect on Student Performance

Abstract: Our institution uses a model of group testing in which students retake exam questions in a group after submitting individual answers. We examined the effects of group testing on exam performance and group dynamics. Students scored higher after discussing the questions. When the same cohort of students was allowed to submit an independent answer one year and then required to achieve consensus the next, the improvement in their performance after discussion did not change. 83.1% of students reported teaching duri… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…In addition to targeting improvements in intra-group familiarity, we also sought to improve equity in participation and decision-making in this intervention through the sharing sharing of curated responses to a previous survey item: "Provide advice you would give to a future student in this class to get the most out of their group exam experience". Although we have not yet analyzed the results of this pilot intervention, an example from group testing in medical education [4] supports the plausible efficacy of the familiarity component of this intervention.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In addition to targeting improvements in intra-group familiarity, we also sought to improve equity in participation and decision-making in this intervention through the sharing sharing of curated responses to a previous survey item: "Provide advice you would give to a future student in this class to get the most out of their group exam experience". Although we have not yet analyzed the results of this pilot intervention, an example from group testing in medical education [4] supports the plausible efficacy of the familiarity component of this intervention.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…The literature on student experiences with in-class groupwork informed our survey development related to themes of group familiarity [3,4], participation equity [3], productive group-work behaviours [4,5], comfort [3], and gender [6] and other social identities [7].…”
Section: A Survey Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Past research on collaborative quizzes has generally sought experimental control and used random group assignment. However, in one study that contrasted random versus selfselected assignment, students in self-selected groups reported lower rates of conflict and stress, compared to their randomly assigned peers [95]. In a similar study, students who self-selected tended to report greater agreement that this approach improved their individual learning, whereas those randomly assigned tended to report greater agreement that the approach improved their collaboration skills [96].…”
Section: Materials and Interventionmentioning
confidence: 96%