Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, San Antonio Uniformed Services Health Education Consortium, JBSA-Fort Sam Houston, TX, USA.
Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, San Antonio Uniformed Services Health Education Consortium, JBSA-Fort Sam Houston, TX, USA.
Am J Otolaryngol. 2022 Sep-Oct;43(5):103575. doi: 10.1016/j.amjoto.2022.103575. Epub 2022 Aug 5.
Otolaryngology resident learning has historically relied on didactic lectures, textbook reading, and practical hands-on patient care. However, evidence suggests that an increasing proportion of residents in other specialties are deviating from this paradigm. This work aims to characterize otolaryngology residents' current asynchronous learning practices (i.e., personal learning outside of didactics and patient care).
A thirteen-question survey of otolaryngology residents in the United States was performed from 10/1/2020-12/1/2020 assessing demographics, educational resource utilization, and educational resource preference.
Nearly all (99 %) respondents reported engaging with educational materials outside of didactics and case prep. Textbook reading comprised 27 % of residents' total study time, with additional time split between board-review book reading (20 %), searching the web (18 %), watching online videos (15 %), and listening to podcasts (10 %). Residents' highest ranked resources were videos, board-review books, textbooks, podcasts, and recorded lectures. Among electronic and multimedia resources, more than half of residents used the following resources: Iowa Head and Neck Protocols (91 %), Board Vitals (75 %), UpToDate (60 %), YouTube (57 %), Google (56 %), and Headmirror (54 %).
Current otolaryngology resident learning involves substantial use of asynchronous learning, including videos, web-based learning, and podcasts, which currently outpace traditional textbook- and didactic-based education. This underscores the need to consider a paradigm shift within academic otolaryngology education away from textbooks and other tradition media to the generation of high-quality multimedia resources for resident learning.
耳鼻喉科住院医师的学习历来依赖于讲座、教科书阅读和实际的患者护理。然而,有证据表明,越来越多的其他专业的住院医师正在偏离这一模式。这项工作旨在描述耳鼻喉科住院医师目前的异步学习实践(即教学和患者护理之外的个人学习)。
2020 年 10 月 1 日至 12 月 1 日,对美国的耳鼻喉科住院医师进行了一项包含 13 个问题的调查,评估了人口统计学、教育资源利用和教育资源偏好。
几乎所有(99%)的受访者都报告说在教学和病例准备之外接触教育材料。教科书阅读占住院医师总学习时间的 27%,额外的时间分别用于阅读备考书籍(20%)、上网搜索(18%)、观看在线视频(15%)和听播客(10%)。住院医师排名最高的资源是视频、备考书籍、教科书、播客和录制讲座。在电子和多媒体资源中,超过一半的住院医师使用了以下资源:爱荷华州头颈部方案(91%)、董事会生命(75%)、UpToDate(60%)、YouTube(57%)、谷歌(56%)和 Headmirror(54%)。
目前耳鼻喉科住院医师的学习涉及大量使用异步学习,包括视频、基于网络的学习和播客,这些目前超过了传统的基于教科书和讲座的教育。这突显出需要在学术耳鼻喉科教育中考虑从传统媒体向高质量多媒体资源的范式转变,以满足住院医师的学习需求。