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Undergraduate Students' Neurophysiological Reasoning: What We Learn from the Attractive Distractors Students Select

Authors :
Doherty, Jennifer H.
Cerchiara, Jack A.
Wenderoth, Mary Pat
Source :
Advances in Physiology Education. Jun 2023 47(2):222-236.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The basis for mastering neurophysiology is understanding ion movement across cell membranes. The Electrochemical Gradients Assessment Device (EGAD) is a 17-item test assessing students' understanding of fundamental concepts of neurophysiology, e.g., electrochemical gradients and resistance, synaptic transmission, and stimulus strength. We collected responses to the EGAD from 534 students from seven institutions nationwide, before and after instruction. We determined the relative difficulty of neurophysiology topics and noted that students did better on "what" questions compared to "how" questions, particularly those integrating concentration gradient and electric forces to predict ion movement. We also found that, even after instruction, students selected one incorrect answer, at a rate greater than random chance for nine questions. We termed these incorrect answers attractive distractors. Most attractive distractors contained terms associated with concentration gradients, equilibrium, or anthropomorphic and teleological reasoning, and incorrect answers containing multiple terms were more attractive. We used X[superscript 2] analysis and alluvial diagrams to investigate how individual students moved or did not move between answer choices on the pre- and posttest. Interestingly, students selecting the attractive distractor on the pretest were just as likely as other incorrect students to move to the correct answer on the posttest. In contrast, of students incorrect on both the pre- and posttest, students who selected the attractive distractor on the pretest were more likely to stick with this answer on the posttest than students choosing other incorrect answers. Combining the EGAD results with alluvial diagrams can inform neurophysiology instruction to address points of student confusion.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1043-4046 and 1522-1229
Volume :
47
Issue :
2
Database :
ERIC
Journal :
Advances in Physiology Education
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
EJ1394309
Document Type :
Journal Articles<br />Reports - Research
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1152/advan.00128.2022