Office of Strategic Planning and Assessment, Division of Practice Advancement and Clinical Education, UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA.
UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA.
Med Educ. 2019 Mar;53(3):285-295. doi: 10.1111/medu.13761. Epub 2018 Nov 15.
In an era of medical education reform and increasing accountability at all levels of higher education, there is a need to understand how the time in which students engage in academic activities can inform evidence-based quality improvement of the curriculum. Time logging provides an opportunity to quantify student use of academic time and guide data-informed decision making in curriculum design.
This study aimed to evaluate faculty staff and student predictions of students' academic time use and to assess students' reported academic time use.
Graduate-level professional students engaged in a time use exercise during the first semester of Year 1 (autumn 2015) and second semester of Year 2 (spring 2017) of a redesigned curriculum launched in autumn 2015. This exercise involved three key activities: (i) prediction of time use; (ii) time logging, and (iii) reflection on time use. Key faculty staff predicted students' weekday time use in both semesters.
Students' predictions of academic time use strongly correlated with their reported academic time use during both the first semester of Year 1 and second semester of Year 2 (r = 0.55 and r = 0.53, respectively). Faculty members' predictions of academic time use did not correlate with student academic time use during either semester. Although 63.8% of Year-1 students reported the time use exercise motivated them to change their time use, students reported spending similar amounts of time on academic activities during the first semester of Year 1 (7.8 ± 1.5 hours per weekday) and the second semester of Year 2 (7.9 ± 2.0 hours per weekday). Most students reported that the exercise had been useful and indicated that their logged time accurately reflected their actual time use.
Although curriculum reform efforts may always require that some assumptions be made, time logging can quantify students' academic use of time. Although students predict their use of time more accurately than do faculty staff, negligible changes in students' academic time use despite reported desires to make changes indicate that students' academic time use may remain inelastic. Educators must consider these findings as they design curricula, identify academic rigour, and establish student expectations of academic time use.
在医学教育改革和高等教育各级问责制的时代,需要了解学生参与学术活动的时间如何为课程的循证质量改进提供信息。时间记录提供了量化学生使用学术时间的机会,并指导课程设计中的数据驱动决策。
本研究旨在评估教师和学生对学生学术时间使用的预测,并评估学生报告的学术时间使用情况。
在 2015 年秋季推出的重新设计课程的第 1 年(秋季 2015 年)和第 2 年(春季 2017 年)的第 1 学期和第 2 学期,研究生级别的专业学生参与了时间使用练习。这项练习涉及三个关键活动:(i)时间使用预测;(ii)时间记录;(iii)时间使用反思。主要教职员工预测了两个学期学生的工作日时间使用情况。
学生对学术时间使用的预测与他们在第 1 年第 1 学期和第 2 年第 2 学期的报告学术时间使用情况密切相关(r = 0.55 和 r = 0.53)。教师对学术时间使用的预测与两个学期的学生学术时间使用均不相关。尽管 63.8%的一年级学生表示时间使用练习促使他们改变时间使用方式,但学生报告在第 1 年第 1 学期(每周工作日 7.8 ± 1.5 小时)和第 2 年第 2 学期(每周工作日 7.9 ± 2.0 小时)期间从事学术活动的时间相似。大多数学生表示该练习很有用,并表示他们记录的时间准确反映了他们的实际时间使用情况。
尽管课程改革工作可能总是需要做出一些假设,但时间记录可以量化学生的学术时间使用情况。尽管学生比教职员工更准确地预测自己的时间使用情况,但学生的学术时间使用几乎没有变化,尽管他们表示希望做出改变,这表明学生的学术时间使用可能仍然缺乏弹性。教育工作者在设计课程、确定学术严谨性和建立学生对学术时间使用的期望时,必须考虑到这些发现。