Halperin Scott J, Zhu Justin R, Francis John S, Grauer Jonathan N
Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA.
Department of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA.
J Med Educ Curric Dev. 2024 Jan 23;11:23821205241228455. doi: 10.1177/23821205241228455. eCollection 2024 Jan-Dec.
Over the years, medical schools have evolved their curricula in response to the medical field, faculty, and students. The current study aims to examine how medical students study, what resources they most commonly use, and how it relates to United States Medical Licensing Examination (USMLE) Step 1 scores.
A cross-sectional survey study of United States medical students was distributed via social media, GroupMe school chats, and school listservs from September 8, 2020, to December 12, 2020. The survey gathered data including, demographic and school information, resources students, time spent using each resource, and USMLE Step 1 scores.
The survey was completed by 560 students from 102 different United States medical schools. Study guides as online resources (83.2%) were mostly used, lecture (82.5%), Anki (spaced repetition flashcards, 68.3%), and school-organized sessions (workshops, labs, and small groups) (60.7%). Of the students surveyed, 90% attended schools with a recorded lecture option. Only 54% of these students watched their lectures live. When watched online, the average watching speed was 1.75 ± 0.4× with a mode of 2× speed. In examining different medical school styles, schools with a 1.5-year preclinical curriculum had higher USMLE Step 1 scores (244.5 ± 15.6 vs 236.9 ± 16.2, -score = .024) compared to schools that did not (1- or 2-year preclinical curriculum).
Medical students seem to be using third-party resources in addition to their medical school curriculums. Because students are already broadly using these, medical schools could allow their curriculums to reference, require, or complement third-party online resources. Additionally, because of their increased cost, medical schools could consider ways to alleviate the cost on medical students as a means of equitable support. Lastly, Step 1 scores significantly correlated with schools with a 1.5-year preclinical curriculum, although the exact reasoning for this remains uncertain.
多年来,医学院校根据医学领域、教师和学生的情况对课程进行了改革。本研究旨在调查医学生的学习方式、最常用的资源,以及这些与美国医师执照考试(USMLE)第一步考试成绩之间的关系。
2020年9月8日至2020年12月12日,通过社交媒体、GroupMe学校聊天群和学校邮件列表对美国医学生进行了一项横断面调查研究。该调查收集了包括人口统计学和学校信息、学生使用的资源、使用每种资源的时间以及USMLE第一步考试成绩等数据。
来自102所不同美国医学院校的560名学生完成了调查。作为在线资源的学习指南(83.2%)使用最为频繁,其次是讲座(82.5%)、Anki(间隔重复抽认卡,68.3%)和学校组织的课程(研讨会、实验室和小组讨论)(60.7%)。在接受调查的学生中,90%就读的学校提供课程录像。这些学生中只有54%会观看直播讲座。在线观看时,平均观看速度为1.75±0.4倍,最常见的是2倍速。在研究不同医学院校的模式时,与没有1.5年临床前课程(1年或2年临床前课程)的学校相比,有1.5年临床前课程的学校USMLE第一步考试成绩更高(244.5±15.6 vs 236.9±16.2,z分数=0.024)。
医学生似乎除了使用医学院校的课程外,还在使用第三方资源。由于学生已经广泛使用这些资源,医学院校可以允许其课程参考、要求或补充第三方在线资源。此外,由于成本增加,医学院校可以考虑减轻医学生成本的方法,作为公平支持的一种手段。最后,第一步考试成绩与有1.5年临床前课程的学校显著相关,尽管其确切原因仍不确定。