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Cane toad or computer mouse? Real and computer-simulated laboratory exercises in physiology classes

journal contribution
posted on 2012-04-01, 00:00 authored by Jan WestJan West, Anneke VeenstraAnneke Veenstra
Traditional practical classes in many countries are being rationalised to reduce costs. The challenge for university educators is to provide students with the opportunity to reinforce theoretical concepts by running something other than a traditional practical program. One alternative is to replace wet labs with comparable computer simulations. These virtual experiments involve no harm to animals and require little ongoing expenditure. This study documents second-year physiology students' perceptions of and attitudes to simulations by incorporating several computer simulations into the practical program. Computer simulations met the conceptual and, to some extent, the motivational goals of university practical programs. While students enjoyed both wet labs and computer-simulated exercises, overwhelmingly the wet lab provided the more memorable and stimulating learning experience. Based on this study, students suggested that computer simulations could be effectively used to complement rather than replace practical classes where students gain laboratory skills.

History

Journal

Australian journal of education

Volume

56

Issue

1

Pagination

56 - 67

Publisher

Australian Council for Educational Research

Location

Camberwell, Vic.

ISSN

0004-9441

eISSN

2050-5884

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2012, Australian Council of Educational Research