School of Oral Health and Welfare, Faculty of Dentistry, Tokushima University, Tokushima, Japan.
Department of Art, Science, and Caring, Institute of Biomedical Sciences, Tokushima University Graduate School, Tokushima, Japan.
BMC Med Educ. 2019 Jul 10;19(1):256. doi: 10.1186/s12909-019-1675-y.
Education in Japan and other Asian countries advocates the stereotypical passive learning style where students are limited in their breadth of knowledge dismissing anything not imparted by their teachers. With globalized education, professions are becoming very competitive, embracing student-centeredness compelling them to introduce active learning activities. A study funded by Japan's Ministry of Education conducted a needs analysis, proposed a solution, and implemented an active learning approach. Since the latter is still new in the Japanese teaching-learning environment, this current study aimed at assessing the willingness of undergraduate students of dental medicine to participate in active learning activities rather than the typical passive-style teaching-learning educational process.
Three active implementation-learning activities, namely International Group Discussions (IGD), Student-Teacher Experience (STE) and Role Play Activities (RPA) were included in the Dental English course in a classroom setting at a dental school in Japan. Students had to choose between participating in the activity or taking the final examination. Two hundred and three third-year undergraduate dental students participated over a 5-year period from October 2013 to March 2017. For IGD, the researchers assigned students to a topic and grouped them with visiting international exchange students. For STE, researchers gave students teacher-prepared presentation slides on basic dental topics, which they presented in front of their classmates. For RPA, students had to do prepared role-play and impromptu role play. Peer and teacher feedbacks of the activities were given to all students. At the end of the course, the students evaluated the active learning activities and wrote their comments in a free entry survey.
All 203 students participated in the active learning activities confirming the changing learning needs of Japanese students in this dental school. The most common comment was that the class was interesting, fun, an easy-to-understand way to learn dental terms, and a safe way to express themselves in the English language.
The majority of Japanese students preferred the active learning style. The study revealed that students reported greater engagement and better learning with proper guidance and time to prepare for the activities.
在日本和其他亚洲国家的教育中,提倡典型的被动学习模式,学生的知识面有限,只接受老师传授的知识,而忽略了其他内容。随着教育的全球化,职业变得非常具有竞争力,以学生为中心,迫使他们引入主动学习活动。日本文部科学省资助的一项研究进行了需求分析,提出了解决方案,并实施了一种主动学习方法。由于这种方法在日本的教与学环境中还比较新,本研究旨在评估口腔医学本科生参与主动学习活动的意愿,而不是典型的被动式教学过程。
在日本一所牙科学院的课堂上,在牙科英语课程中纳入了三种主动实施学习活动,即国际小组讨论(IGD)、师生体验(STE)和角色扮演活动(RPA)。学生必须在参加活动或参加期末考试之间做出选择。在 2013 年 10 月至 2017 年 3 月的 5 年期间,有 203 名三年级本科生参加了这些活动。对于 IGD,研究人员为学生分配了一个主题,并将他们与来访的国际交流学生分组。对于 STE,研究人员为学生提供了关于基本牙科主题的教师准备的演示幻灯片,学生在同学面前进行演示。对于 RPA,学生必须进行准备好的角色扮演和即兴角色扮演。所有学生都获得了活动的同伴和教师反馈。在课程结束时,学生对主动学习活动进行了评估,并在自由答题调查中写下了他们的意见。
所有 203 名学生都参加了主动学习活动,这证实了这所牙科学院的日本学生学习需求的变化。最常见的评论是,这门课很有趣,很有趣,是学习牙科术语的一种易懂的方式,也是用英语表达自己的一种安全方式。
大多数日本学生更喜欢主动学习方式。研究表明,在适当的指导和准备活动的时间下,学生报告说他们的参与度更高,学习效果更好。