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A Flipped Physiology Course Positively Impacted Student Success and Perceptions of Learning.

Created on 13 Jul 2026

Authors

Elizabeth Stansberry, Rachel Tan, Krista L Lucas

Published in

Advances in physiology education. Jul 13, 2026. Epub Jul 13, 2026.

Abstract

The flipped classroom model is an approach that contrasts the traditional model for higher education by moving curated lecture material to independent study time, expected to be completed prior to lectures. With this switch, lectures can focus on active modalities to consolidate knowledge via group activities, problem solving, and discussions, thereby increasing student engagement. In this study, we sought to understand students' views of the flipped classroom model in a university human physiology class on actual and perceived academic performance. Data from 41 participants was collected in spring 2024 using surveys, classroom observations, focus groups, and final course grades. Results revealed that the flipped classroom model maintained student engagement and participation, while allowing the instructor to gauge student progress on a given subject, from background knowledge to new applications. In addition, students consistently displayed the ability to incorporate previously held information into new contexts, an opportunity facilitated by the activities that took place during class time. Finally, student responses demonstrate deeper levels of cognition assessed through Bloom's Taxonomy in regard to their learning and methods of learning, building foundational skills to support new and more complicated concepts as they come.

PMID:
42440302
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 13 Jul 2026.

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