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Improving Academic Performance of Sport and Exercise Science Undergraduate Students in Gross Anatomy Using a Near‐Peer Teaching Program

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Peer and near‐peer teaching programs are common in medical undergraduate courses. However, there are no studies that have investigated the effectiveness of a near‐peer teaching program on the academic performance… Click to show full abstract

Peer and near‐peer teaching programs are common in medical undergraduate courses. However, there are no studies that have investigated the effectiveness of a near‐peer teaching program on the academic performance of undergraduate students pursuing sport and exercise science coursework. This study was conducted to analyze the effectiveness of such a program for students who participated in a course on the functional anatomy of the locomotor apparatus. A total of 39 student participants were divided into two groups: students in one group voluntarily attended at least one session of a near‐peer teaching program, and students in the other group attended no sessions. The final grade (range 0–100%) was recorded and used as an indicator of academic performance. The final grade of students who attended the near‐peer teaching program (69.5 ± 16.0%) was 38.7% higher (P = 0.002, d = 1.06) than those who did not (50.1 ± 20.4%). When the academic performance of the same students was evaluated in another course (exercise physiology) that did not offer a near‐peer teaching program, there were no significant differences between the groups (students who attended or did not attend the near‐peer teaching program). A significant positive association was found between near‐peer teaching program frequency and the number of students approved and not approved in the course (P = 0.041). A significant difference (P = 0.001) was found in the attendance at regular classes between the group who participated in the near‐peer teaching program (median: 62 hours; IQR [interquartile ranges]: 4.0 hours) and those who did not (median: 58 hours; IQR: 4.0 hours). Gender was not a moderating factor on academic performance or near‐peer teaching program attendance. These results highlight the effectiveness of a near‐peer teaching program on the academic performance of students from a sport and exercise science degree program while enrolled in an anatomy course. Anat Sci Educ. © 2018 American Association of Anatomists.

Keywords: teaching program; anatomy; program; peer teaching; near peer

Journal Title: Anatomical Sciences Education
Year Published: 2019

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