Skillslab, Faculty of Health Medicine and Life Sciences, Maastricht University, The Netherlands.
Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract. 2012 Aug;17(3):339-55. doi: 10.1007/s10459-011-9312-5. Epub 2011 Jun 28.
Lack of published studies on students' practice behaviour of physical examination skills outside timetabled training sessions inspired this study into what activities medical students undertake to improve their skills and factors influencing this. Six focus groups of a total of 52 students from Years 1-3 using a pre-established interview guide. Interviews were recorded, transcribed and analyzed using qualitative methods. The interview guide was based on questionnaire results; overall response rate for Years 1-3 was 90% (n = 875). Students report a variety of activities to improve their physical examination skills. On average, students devote 20% of self-study time to skill training with Year 1 students practising significantly more than Year 3 students. Practice patterns shift from just-in-time learning to a longitudinal selfdirected approach. Factors influencing this change are assessment methods and simulated/real patients. Learning resources used include textbooks, examination guidelines, scientific articles, the Internet, videos/DVDs and scoring forms from previous OSCEs. Practising skills on fellow students happens at university rooms or at home. Also family and friends were mentioned to help. Simulated/real patients stimulated students to practise of physical examination skills, initially causing confusion and anxiety about skill performance but leading to increased feelings of competence. Difficult or enjoyable skills stimulate students to practise. The strategies students adopt to master physical examination skills outside timetabled training sessions are self-directed. OSCE assessment does have influence, but learning takes place also when there is no upcoming assessment. Simulated and real patients provide strong incentives to work on skills. Early patient contacts make students feel more prepared for clinical practice.
缺乏关于学生在时间表外的实践行为的已发表研究,这激发了本研究,旨在探讨医学生为提高技能而进行的哪些活动以及影响这些活动的因素。共对来自 1 年级至 3 年级的 6 个焦点小组的 52 名学生进行了访谈,每个小组使用预先确定的访谈指南。访谈以录音、文字记录和定性方法进行分析。访谈指南基于问卷调查结果;1 年级至 3 年级的总体回复率为 90%(n=875)。学生报告了各种提高体检技能的活动。平均而言,学生将 20%的自学时间用于技能培训,1 年级学生的实践明显多于 3 年级学生。实践模式从即时学习转变为纵向自我指导的方法。影响这种变化的因素是评估方法和模拟/真实患者。使用的学习资源包括教科书、检查指南、科学文章、互联网、视频/DVD 和之前的 OSCE 评分表。在大学房间或家中对同学进行技能练习。也提到了家人和朋友来帮助。模拟/真实患者促使学生练习体检技能,最初会导致对技能表现的困惑和焦虑,但会增加学生的能力感。困难或有趣的技能会促使学生进行练习。学生在时间表外的培训课程之外采用的掌握体检技能的策略是自我指导的。OSCE 评估确实有影响,但即使没有即将到来的评估,学习也会发生。模拟和真实患者为练习技能提供了强大的动力。早期的患者接触使学生对临床实践更有准备。