Influence of Faculty-Derived Concept Maps on Student Study Strategies
Kaitlin P. Hardy, Amanda K. Burbage, Julie A. Kerry

TL;DR
This study shows that faculty-created concept maps help medical students overcome resistance to using concept mapping as a study strategy.
Contribution
The study introduces faculty-derived concept maps as a tool to increase student adoption of concept mapping.
Findings
Students found faculty-derived concept maps helpful for organizing and connecting module content.
Use of concept mapping increased after students engaged with faculty-derived maps.
Ranking and annotating the maps further increased concept mapping adoption in later modules.
Abstract
Concept mapping is a well-established tool for students to actively organize information into a visual and spatial framework. However, some students are resistant to adopting concept mapping as a study strategy due to the time and effort involved in generating the maps. In this study, we explored student perceptions of faculty-derived concept maps (FD-maps) developed to accompany content within a Foundational Science module in a medical school curriculum. We subsequently investigated whether student use of FD-maps helped overcome resistance to adoption of concept mapping. Student evaluation data was analyzed using a mixed methods approach to explore student perceptions of FD-maps. Based on this analysis, we deployed a survey to M1 (26% response rate) and M2 students (20% response rate) to assess the impact of FD-maps on subsequent use of concept mapping. Data from the survey was…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEducational Assessment and Pedagogy · Visual and Cognitive Learning Processes · Science Education and Pedagogy
