Hendricson William, Eisenberg Elise, Guest Gary, Jones Pamela, Johnson Lynn, Panagakos Fotinos, McDonald James, Cintron Laura
Educational and Faculty Development, School of Dentistry, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, 7703 Floyd Curl Drive, San Antonio, TX 78229-3900, USA.
J Dent Educ. 2006 May;70(5):480-99.
In spite of efforts by many dental schools to provide information technology resources for students, only a handful of studies have been conducted to determine what dental students think about these initiatives. There are no reports in the literature describing students' perceptions of mandatory laptop programs, which are now being implemented by at least 25 percent of North American dental schools. In schools that have implemented laptop programs, students are required either to enroll with their own laptops that meet specifications or to purchase a laptop from the school at matriculation. In some schools, students are also required to purchase curriculum support software that is bundled with the laptop. This study was conducted to determine students' opinions at U.S. dental schools with mandatory laptop programs about these aspects of this information technology initiative: frequency of use, perceived necessity of use, note-typing during lectures, effectiveness of training, influence on study habits, benefits, implementation problems, added value in relation to added tuition costs, impact on quality of dental education, overall rating of the laptop experience, and impact of the laptop on use of other electronic curriculum resources. Responses of students at schools that purchased packaged curriculum support software from a commercial vendor were compared with students' responses at schools where faculty provided their own educational software. Responses were also compared among freshmen, sophomores, and upperclassmen in a cross-sectional sample. In 2004, approximately 800 dental students at fourteen dental schools responded to eleven questions that requested their impressions and evaluation of mandatory laptop programs and associated educational software. These questions comprised one section of the IREC Students' Questionnaire (IREC=Institutional Readiness for Electronic Curriculum) that assessed students' perceptions of various aspects of information technology at their schools. The majority of students (63 percent) reported that the laptop and associated software were not essential for successful performance in their courses primarily because few instructors had modified their courses to take advantage of laptop capacities. Slightly more than half of the students reported their training was good or excellent, but felt that classroom-based "one size fits all" training was not effective. Less than 15 percent of the students reported that they had made substantial changes in their study habits as a consequence of the laptop program. The benefits perceived by students were primarily related to enhanced email communication with classmates and instructors and convenient access to the Internet and teachers' PowerPoint presentations. Implementation barriers included the inconvenience of carrying laptops to classes, lack of incentive to use the laptop and software because instructors did not require it, and poor quality software. Only 32 percent of students agreed that the value of the laptop and associated software was equal to the added tuition costs. Less than half of the students perceived that the laptop and software had improved the quality of their education, but more than 70 percent rated their overall experiences with laptops as "okay," "good," or "excellent." Freshmen expressed significantly more positive attitudes about the frequency of use, cost-effectiveness, educational value, and overall quality of laptops and bundled software than did upperclassmen. A significantly higher percentage of students at schools affiliated with a software vendor reported that laptops were essential in courses than students at schools with locally produced software, but students at vendor-supplied schools rated the cost-effectiveness significantly lower. Overall, students' assessment of mandatory laptop programs was mixed although freshmen provided significantly more positive responses than did upperclassmen. Incorporation of the e-curriculum into dental schools appears to be following a similar pattern as problem-based learning (PBL) in the 1980s and 1990s. Recommendations for enhancing future e-curricula are proposed based on lessons learned from both information technology and PBL implementation.
尽管许多牙科学院努力为学生提供信息技术资源,但仅有少数研究来确定牙科学生对这些举措的看法。文献中没有报告描述学生对强制使用笔记本电脑计划的看法,而目前至少25%的北美牙科学院正在实施该计划。在已实施笔记本电脑计划的学校中,学生要么自带符合规格的笔记本电脑入学,要么在入学时从学校购买。在一些学校,学生还需要购买与笔记本电脑捆绑的课程支持软件。本研究旨在确定美国实施强制笔记本电脑计划的牙科学院学生对这项信息技术举措以下方面的看法:使用频率、使用的必要性、课堂笔记记录、培训效果、对学习习惯的影响、益处、实施问题、与增加的学费成本相关的附加值、对牙科教育质量的影响、笔记本电脑体验的总体评价以及笔记本电脑对其他电子课程资源使用的影响。将从商业供应商购买打包课程支持软件的学校学生的回答与教师提供自己的教育软件的学校学生的回答进行比较。在一个横断面样本中,还对新生、大二学生和高年级学生的回答进行了比较。2004年,十四所牙科学院的约800名牙科学生回答了11个问题,这些问题要求他们对强制笔记本电脑计划及相关教育软件发表看法和评价。这些问题是IREC学生问卷(IREC=电子课程机构准备情况)的一部分,该问卷评估了学生对学校信息技术各个方面的看法。大多数学生(63%)报告称,笔记本电脑及相关软件对于他们在课程中取得成功并非必不可少,主要原因是很少有教师调整课程以利用笔记本电脑的功能。略多于一半的学生报告称他们的培训良好或优秀,但认为基于课堂的“一刀切”培训效果不佳。不到15%的学生报告称,由于笔记本电脑计划,他们的学习习惯发生了重大改变。学生认为的益处主要与加强与同学和教师的电子邮件通信以及方便访问互联网和教师的PowerPoint演示文稿有关。实施障碍包括携带笔记本电脑上课不方便、由于教师不要求而缺乏使用笔记本电脑和软件的动力以及软件质量差。只有32%的学生认为笔记本电脑及相关软件的价值等同于增加的学费成本。不到一半的学生认为笔记本电脑和软件提高了他们的教育质量,但超过70%的学生将他们使用笔记本电脑的总体体验评为“尚可”、“良好”或“优秀”。与高年级学生相比,新生对笔记本电脑及捆绑软件的使用频率、成本效益、教育价值和总体质量表达了明显更积极的态度。与使用本地生产软件的学校相比,与软件供应商相关联的学校中,报告称笔记本电脑在课程中必不可少的学生比例显著更高,但供应商提供软件的学校的学生对成本效益的评价显著更低。总体而言,学生对强制笔记本电脑计划的评价不一,尽管新生的回答比高年级学生明显更积极。将电子课程纳入牙科学院似乎正遵循与20世纪80年代和90年代基于问题的学习(PBL)类似的模式。基于从信息技术和PBL实施中吸取的经验教训,提出了加强未来电子课程的建议。