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      Differences between students in various programs in a biochemistry course in lecture attendance, engagement, and academic outcomes

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      Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education
      Wiley

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          Abstract

          The positive relationship between lecture attendance and academic outcomes may be changing in the era of lecturing recordings. The objective of the study was to test this and to determine whether it varied between student cohorts. Consenting students in biochemistry from pharmacy, biomedical science, medical laboratory science, and nutrition programs, which had access to lecture recordings, signed in when attending lectures. Attendance was related to academic outcomes by regression analysis. Average attendance was low (≤19%) and declined significantly between years for most weeks. The students who attended ≥50% of lectures (≤17%) had higher marks than those that attended <50%. Overall regression analysis showed there were positive associations between most academic outcomes and lecture attendance or engagement (attendance and lecture recording access). However, these associations were weak or moderate for students in the pharmacy and biomedical science programs and were not apparent for students in the medical laboratory science and nutrition programs. In a separate survey, the most common reason for attending lectures was “I think I learn more by attending” and for not attending, was “Work commitments made it difficult to get to lectures.” The main conclusion is that students of biochemistry should be encouraged to attend lectures, as the limited evidence suggests that attendance may still be associated with better academic outcomes and that some students find them beneficial.

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          Relationships between student engagement and academic achievement: A meta-analysis

          Most scholars have argued that student engagement positively predicts academic achievement, but some have challenged this view. We sought to resolve this debate by offering conclusive evidence through a meta-analysis of 69 independent studies (196,473 participants). The results revealed that (a) there was a moderately strong and positive correlation between overall student engagement and academic achievement, and an analysis of the domains of behavioral, emotional, and cognitive engagement showed that almost all had a positive correlation with students' academic achievement; and (b) a moderator analysis revealed that the relationship between student engagement and academic achievement was influenced by the method of reporting engagement, cultural value, and gender. Furthermore, the relationships of behavioral, emotional, and cognitive engagement with academic achievement were influenced by reporting method for engagement, cultural value, or gender.
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            Class Attendance in College: A Meta-Analytic Review of the Relationship of Class Attendance With Grades and Student Characteristics

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              Who Succeeds at University? Factors predicting academic performance in first year Australian university students

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education
                Biochem Molecular Bio Educ
                Wiley
                1470-8175
                1539-3429
                July 2023
                April 21 2023
                July 2023
                : 51
                : 4
                : 377-388
                Affiliations
                [1 ] School of Pharmacy and Medical Sciences, Faculty of Health Griffith University Gold Coast Queensland Australia
                Article
                10.1002/bmb.21729
                2a2d9d20-213d-4ef5-a440-d5a50a3eea12
                © 2023

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/

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