Abstract
Research in cognitive psychology and emerging classroom applications suggest that the narrative approach may be a useful mode of textbook organization. This study compared undergraduates' preference and performance with traditional (T) and narrative (N) text. On a review quiz and final exam, the majority chose to be tested on narrative text. On routine quizzes, a statistically significant difference in performance appeared in one of six in-stances, favoring the narrative. On the final exam, all mean scores were higher for the narrative, yielding a significant correlation between performance and text mode. On a follow-up test, material from narrative chapters was more often recalled; for two chapters, these differences were significant. Questionnaire data showed the narrative as being more enjoyable and more useful in learning.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
