Teaching bioscience to nursing students-What works?

Nurs Open. 2021 Mar;8(2):990-996. doi: 10.1002/nop2.709. Epub 2020 Nov 25.

Abstract

Aim: To compare the effects of flipped classroom and traditional auditorium lectures, on nursing students' examination results in bioscience.

Design: An educational intervention study.

Methods: All the first-year students in the bachelor programme (N = 493) were entered into a database and randomly assigned to the intervention or the control group in a course in bioscience. The outcome measures are the proportion of students who passed the examination, and the distribution of grades from A to E. Chi-square tests and Mann-Whitney Wilcoxon test were used. The odds to pass versus fail were modelled using binary logistic regression.

Results: The proportion of students who did not pass the final examination was very similar in the intervention and the control groups, 21.4% and 23.6% (p = .574). Our data did not reveal any statistically significant differences concerning the distribution of grades (p = .691). Students with biology and/or natural science had higher odds for passing.

Keywords: bioscience; education; flipped classroom; nurses; nursing; students.

Publication types

  • Randomized Controlled Trial

MeSH terms

  • Curriculum
  • Humans
  • Problem-Based Learning
  • Students, Nursing*