Sheffield Teaching Hospitals, Northern General Hospital, Herries Road, Sheffield, S57AU, UK.
University of Sheffield, Western Bank, Sheffield, S10 2TN, UK.
BMC Med Educ. 2021 Jul 21;21(1):390. doi: 10.1186/s12909-021-02822-5.
Technological advances have previously been hailed as a new dawn in Higher Education, with the advent of 'massive open online courses' (MOOCs) and online learning. Virtual platforms have potential advantages such as accessibility and availability but simply transferring educational material to the online environment may not ensure high quality learning. Clinical examination is a fundamental principle of medical assessment, and this study aimed to assess the role of technology in teaching these skills.
AIMS/OBJECTIVES: To determine whether three teaching modalities were of equal efficacy in teaching examination of the shoulder joint to naïve medical students.
Sixty-seven pre-clinical medical students naïve to large joint examination were recruited. Participants completed a learning style questionnaire and were then block randomised to three study: textbook study, face-to-face seminar, or video tutorial via online platform. The same examination technique was taught in all groups, with the intervention being the method of delivery All second year students were eligible for inclusion. The single exclusion criteria was previous exposure to clinical examination teaching. Students were assessed using a standardised scoring system at baseline (pre-intervention), and days 5 and 19 post-intervention (maximum score 30). Assessors were blinded to group allocation. The primary outcome was assessment score at day 5 post intervention.
There was no difference between the three groups at baseline assessment (mean scores 2.4 for textbook, 2.8 for face-to-face, and 3.1 for video; p = 0.267). Mean post-intervention scores were 16.5 textbook, 25.5 face-to-face, and 22.4 video (p < 0.001, η = .449). There was no change between day 5 and day 19 post-intervention assessment scores in any group (p = 0.373), Preferred learning style did not affect scores (p = 0.543).
Face-to-face teaching was the most effective method for teaching clinical examination of the shoulder. Technology can potentially increase accessibility and remove geographic barriers, but is not as effective if teaching techniques are simply mirrored in an online format. Online platforms allow in depth data analysis of how learners interact with educational material and this may have value in improving the design of online educational materials, and is a potential area for further research.
技术进步曾被誉为高等教育的新纪元,随着“大规模开放式在线课程”(MOOC)和在线学习的出现。虚拟平台具有易于访问和可用性等潜在优势,但简单地将教育材料转移到在线环境中可能无法确保高质量的学习。临床检查是医学评估的基本原则,本研究旨在评估技术在教授这些技能中的作用。
目的/目标:确定三种教学模式在教授新手医学生肩关节检查方面的效果是否相同。
招募了 67 名对大关节检查一无所知的临床医学前学生。参与者完成学习风格问卷后,按块随机分为三组:课本学习、面对面研讨会或通过在线平台的视频教程。所有组都教授相同的检查技术,干预措施是交付方式。所有二年级学生都有资格参加。唯一的排除标准是之前接触过临床检查教学。学生在基线(干预前)、第 5 天和第 19 天(最高 30 分)进行评估。评估者对分组分配情况不知情。主要结局是干预后第 5 天的评估得分。
三组在基线评估时无差异(课本组平均得分为 2.4,面对面组为 2.8,视频组为 3.1;p=0.267)。干预后的平均得分分别为 16.5 分(课本组)、25.5 分(面对面组)和 22.4 分(视频组)(p<0.001,η=0.449)。任何一组在第 5 天和第 19 天的干预后评估得分之间都没有变化(p=0.373),首选学习方式对分数没有影响(p=0.543)。
面对面教学是教授肩关节临床检查最有效的方法。技术可以提高可及性并消除地理障碍,但如果教学技术只是在在线格式中简单反映,其效果就不那么有效。在线平台允许深入分析学习者如何与教育材料互动,这在改进在线教育材料的设计方面可能具有价值,并且是进一步研究的潜在领域。