2016
DOI: 10.5430/ijhe.v5n1p250
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Predicting Academic Success of Health Science Students for First Year Anatomy and Physiology

Abstract: Students commencing tertiary education enter through a number of traditional and alternative academic pathways. As a result, tertiary institutions encounter a broad range of students, varying in demographic, previous education, characteristics and academic achievement. In recent years, the relatively constant increase in tertiary applications in Australia has not translated to an increase in student retention or graduate numbers. The Health Sciences discipline typically falls within this paradigm, prompting va… Show more

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Cited by 44 publications
(50 citation statements)
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“…Students in all cohorts reported a significant increase for all body systems, although lower levels of confidence were reported for students in the HPE cohort preand post-completion. These findings persisted in final unit grades, with the HPE cohort having an average of 56.2% compared to higher grades for the BESS and BMS cohorts (64.6 and 69.4%, respectively), a trend previously observed in first year anatomy and physiology (Anderton, Evans, & Chivers, 2016). While these results may reflect investment of the students in the unit (i.e.…”
Section: Student Confidence and Actual Performancementioning
confidence: 50%
“…Students in all cohorts reported a significant increase for all body systems, although lower levels of confidence were reported for students in the HPE cohort preand post-completion. These findings persisted in final unit grades, with the HPE cohort having an average of 56.2% compared to higher grades for the BESS and BMS cohorts (64.6 and 69.4%, respectively), a trend previously observed in first year anatomy and physiology (Anderton, Evans, & Chivers, 2016). While these results may reflect investment of the students in the unit (i.e.…”
Section: Student Confidence and Actual Performancementioning
confidence: 50%
“…Several factors related to tertiary academic success have been identified in studies including gender (Anderton et al, 2016), self efficacy (Trigwell, Ashwin, & Millan, 2013), high school success (Smith & White, 2015), and less use of internet (Mishra, Draus, Goreva, Leone, & Caputo, 2014). This review paper analyzes these factors within the ecological model presented by Dalton et al (2007).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A large body of empirical evidence suggests women to be more academically successful than men generally (Anderton et al, 2016;Arshad, Zaidi, & Mahmood, 2015;Richardson, Abraham, & Bond, 2012;Soria, Fransen, & Nackerud, 2013) and to be more A grade achievers than men (Smith & White, 2015). Smith (2016) used the data of 38,236 students taken from a British university's administrative records, who entered the university between 1998 and 2006, and found women to be more successful than men.…”
Section: Factors Of Tertiary Academic Success At Individual Level Gendermentioning
confidence: 99%
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