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Learning from lectures: The effect of varying the detail in lecture handouts on note‐taking and recall
29
Citations
22
References
1988
Year
EducationLecture HandoutsLearning-by-doingStudent OutcomeInstructional ModelsLanguage LearningStudent LearningLearning ProblemCognitive ScienceKey PointsLearning SciencesClassroom InstructionEducational TestingLearning AnalyticsEducational MeasurementInstructionLecture RecordingPerformance StudiesTeachingDental SurgeryLearning TheoryEducational AssessmentLearning Outcome
Abstract Previous research on the effect of lecture handouts on student learning indicates that students who are given skeletal handouts usually perform better in course examinations than students who take all their own notes. The present study investigates whether the amount of detail in the handout is a critical factor in this. A randomized groups experiment was conducted in the context of a course on dental surgery. Four lecture handout conditions (headings and full text; headings and key points; headings only; no supplementary materials) were compared on tests 2 days and 2 weeks after the lecture. The significant differences between conditions were: ‘headings only’ better than ‘headings and key points’ on the first test; ‘headings only’ better than ‘no supplementary materials’ on the second test; and ‘headings and full text’ better than ‘no supplementary materials’ on the second test. These results indicate that the amount of detail is a critical factor in handout effectiveness.
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