Stanley I, Stephens C
Department of General Practice, University of Liverpool.
Br J Gen Pract. 1991 Apr;41(345):155-8.
A computer assisted learning software package for medical students, EnMesh, designed to increase understanding of the problem-handling skills needed in general practice has been developed at the University of Liverpool. Users access the system anonymously and respond in sequence to problems in the form of clinical vignettes. Responses to each problem, in the form of up to six two-line text statements, are generated by the user with a simple word processing facility. Users compare their responses with those of established general practitioners, searching for similar or matching ideas. After completing not less than four problems users are provided with feedback on their performance in relation to the physical, psychological and social dimensions of the problems. The frequency with which the system is being used and the results of self scoring are monitored by a parallel teacher programme. The programmes are designed to run on a wide range of microcomputers. EnMesh was designed to provide an informal learning resource within an established clinical course. The challenge of valid problems, the option to respond anonymously, self scoring and feedback on performance are features designed to attract student participation in computer assisted learning. Although in EnMesh the expert data is categorized in three dimensions, in designing such software the number of categories is limited solely by the range of responses which feedback is required to reflect.
利物浦大学开发了一款面向医学生的计算机辅助学习软件包EnMesh,旨在增强对全科医疗中所需问题处理技能的理解。用户可匿名访问该系统,并按顺序对以临床病例形式呈现的问题做出回应。用户通过简单的文字处理工具,以最多六条两行文本陈述的形式生成对每个问题的回答。用户将自己的回答与资深全科医生的回答进行比较,寻找相似或匹配的观点。在完成不少于四个问题后,系统会就用户在问题的生理、心理和社会层面上的表现提供反馈。一个并行的教师程序会监测该系统的使用频率和自我评分结果。这些程序设计为可在多种微型计算机上运行。EnMesh旨在在既定的临床课程中提供一种非正式的学习资源。真实问题的挑战性、匿名回应的选项、自我评分以及对表现的反馈,都是旨在吸引学生参与计算机辅助学习的特点。尽管在EnMesh中专家数据按三个维度分类,但在设计此类软件时,分类数量仅受所需反馈要反映的回答范围限制。