PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Powell, Brandon D. AU - Oxley, Madison S. AU - Chen, Kevin AU - Anksorus, Heidi AU - Hubal, Robert AU - Persky, Adam AU - Harris, Suzanne TI - Concept Mapping Activity to Enhance Pharmacy Student Metacognition and Comprehension of Fundamental Disease State Knowledge AID - 10.5688/ajpe8266 DP - 2020 Dec 23 TA - American Journal of Pharmaceutical Education PG - 8266 4099 - http://www.ajpe.org/content/early/2020/12/04/ajpe8266.short 4100 - http://www.ajpe.org/content/early/2020/12/04/ajpe8266.full AB - Objective. To examine the impact of pre-class concept mapping on students' ability to self-assess their degree of foundational disease state knowledge (metacognition), as well as pre-class quiz performance.Methods. Second-year pharmacy students in a problem-based learning course were responsible for self-directed learning of foundational knowledge for 14 disease states. After completing independent pre-class reading, students either created group concept maps for which feedback was provided; (2) created group concept maps with no formal feedback; or (3) had no formal group activity. The next day, prior to the formal in class discussion, students completed a quiz over foundational knowledge and predicted the number of questions they would answer correctly before completing the quiz. Quiz performance was compared between the three conditions, and bias and absolute bias were calculated to evaluate metacognitive skills.Results. When students engaged in concept mapping, their quiz performance was significantly higher than the business-as-usual control. However, there was no difference in the predicted scores on quizzes.Conclusion. Concept mapping did not improve metacognitive skills but did have small effects on quiz performance. More research is needed to tease apart the roles of concept mapping, group activity and feedback in altering quiz performance and metacognitive skills.