McDaniel M Jane, Russell Gregory B, Crandall Sonia J
M. Jane McDaniel, MS, MLS(ASCP)SC, is a lecturer and the director of admissions in the Yale Physician Assistant Online Program at Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut. Gregory B. Russell, MS, is a senior biostatistician and associate director of the Design and Analysis Unit in the Department of Biostatistical Sciences, Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina. Sonia J. Crandall, PhD, MS, is a professor and the director of research and scholarship in the Department of Physician Assistant Studies at Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina.
J Physician Assist Educ. 2018 Jun;29(2):109-114. doi: 10.1097/JPA.0000000000000198.
The purpose of the study was to compare virtual microscopy with light microscopy to determine differences in learning outcomes and learner attitudes in teaching clinical microscopy to physician assistant (PA) students.
A prospective, randomized, crossover design study was conducted with a convenience sample of 67 first-year PA students randomized to 2 groups. One group used light microscopes to find microscopic structures, whereas the other group used instructor-directed video streaming of microscopic elements. At the midpoint of the study, the groups switched instructional strategies. Learning outcomes were assessed via posttest after each section of the study, with comparison of final practical examination results to previous cohorts. Attitudes about the 2 educational strategies were assessed through a postcourse questionnaire with a Likert scale.
Analysis of the first posttest demonstrated that students in the video-streamed group had significantly better learning outcomes than those in the light microscopy group (P = .004; Cohen's d = 0.74). Analysis of the posttest after crossover showed no differences between the 2 groups (P = .48). Between the 2 posttests, students first assigned to the light microscopy group scored a 6.6 mean point increase (±10.4 SD; p = .0011), whereas students first assigned to the virtual microscopy group scored a 1.3 mean point increase (±7.1 SD; p = .29). The light microscopy group improved more than the virtual microscopy group (P = .019). Analysis of practical examination data revealed higher scores for the study group compared with 5 previous cohorts of first-year students (P < .0001; Cohen's d = 0.66). Students preferred virtual microscopy to traditional light microscopy.
Virtual microscopy is an effective educational strategy, and students prefer this method when learning to interpret images of clinical specimens.
本研究旨在比较虚拟显微镜与光学显微镜,以确定在向医师助理(PA)学生教授临床显微镜检查时学习成果和学习者态度的差异。
采用前瞻性、随机、交叉设计研究,对67名一年级PA学生的便利样本进行随机分组,分为两组。一组使用光学显微镜查找微观结构,而另一组使用教师指导的微观元素视频流。在研究中期,两组交换教学策略。在研究的每个部分之后通过后测评估学习成果,并将最终实践考试结果与之前的队列进行比较。通过带有李克特量表的课程后问卷评估对这两种教育策略的态度。
第一次后测分析表明,视频流组的学生学习成果明显优于光学显微镜组(P = 0.004;科恩d值 = 0.74)。交叉后的后测分析显示两组之间没有差异(P = 0.48)。在两次后测之间,最初分配到光学显微镜组的学生平均得分提高了6.6分(±10.4标准差;p = 0.0011),而最初分配到虚拟显微镜组的学生平均得分提高了1.3分(±7.1标准差;p = 0.29)。光学显微镜组的进步比虚拟显微镜组更大(P = 0.019)。实践考试数据分析显示,与之前的5个一年级学生队列相比,研究组得分更高(P < 0.0001;科恩d值 = 0.66)。学生更喜欢虚拟显微镜而非传统光学显微镜。
虚拟显微镜是一种有效的教育策略,学生在学习解读临床标本图像时更喜欢这种方法。