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STUDENTS‘ APPROACHES TO LEARNING IN AN INNOVATIVE MEDICAL SCHOOL: A CROSS‐SECTIONAL STUDY
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1986
Year
Educational PsychologyEducationAllied Health ProfessionsStudent OutcomePsychologyInnovative Medical SchoolStudent LearningHealth EducationInnovative EducationCross‐sectional StudySchool PsychologyLearning SciencesStudent SuccessEducational MeasurementMedical StudentsTeachingSecondary EducationResponse Rate 84Educational AssessmentEducational Program Development
S ummary . A slightly modified version of Entwistle and Ramsden's Approaches to Studying Inventory was administered to first‐, third‐ and final‐year students in an innovative medical school (response rate 84 per cent), to see whether the Inventory's constructs also apply to medical students, to see whether they might constitute a helpful framework for counselling students in academic difficulty, and to see whether the students' responses reflected the educational philosophy of the school. The psychometric robustness of the instrument was confirmed, and its applicability to these groups of medical students was established. The instrument was not highly predictive of academic success, but seemed to offer a useful framework for student counselling. Student responses to the inventory were consistent with the school's educational philosophy.