DeVoe Pamela Houghton, Osgood Marcy, Shane Nancy
University of New Mexico School of Medicine.
MedEdPublish (2016). 2019 Sep 17;8:175. doi: 10.15694/mep.2019.000175.1. eCollection 2019.
This article was migrated. The article was marked as recommended. At the impending conclusion of a ten-year post baccalaureate program, the authors evaluated our Premedical Enrichment Program (PrEP) for effectiveness and component transferability to the medical curriculum. The study focused on two research questions: 1) was the PrEP successful in matriculating well prepared educationally disadvantaged students to medical school, and, 2) What did PrEP students value most about the program? We matched 61 PrEP participants to a nonparticipating student of the same cohort, age, ethnic status, gender, economic disadvantage, MCAT score, and undergraduate GPA. We compared Step 1 performance and academic performance. An online survey tool collected student views on PrEP program effectiveness and retrospective pre-post questions regarding academic preparedness. PrEP student academic outcomes were equal to those of the matched comparison group despite higher MCAT scores and GPAs for the latter. Students valued the strong program relationships they built, ensuring study partners and emotional support during medical school. Students reported that the PrEP increased biochemistry knowledge, improved study skills, familiarized them with medical school processes, and introduced them to an active learning pedagogy. They expressed gratitude for having the opportunity to study medicine. They felt the program built their confidence, encouraged professional identity exploration, and that their diverse experiences and challenges were valued. Results reiterate the importance of the social learning environment, the potential to strengthen academic performance by building genuine and long lasting relationships, and the subsequent potential for growth in confidence for medical school. Interconnected course content reinforces new learning and student confidence with learning strategies. Important goals for educationally disadvantaged student success include building these trust relationships with significant faculty and student colleagues. Confidence and trust have the opportunity to grow with authentic performance successes, witnessed, shared, and confirmed by sympathetic peers and faculty.
本文已迁移。该文章被标记为推荐文章。在一个为期十年的本科后项目即将结束时,作者评估了我们的医学预科强化项目(PrEP)的有效性以及各组成部分向医学课程的可转移性。该研究聚焦于两个研究问题:1)PrEP项目是否成功地让教育背景不佳但准备充分的学生进入医学院就读,以及2)参与PrEP项目的学生最看重该项目的哪些方面?我们将61名PrEP参与者与同届、年龄、种族身份、性别、经济劣势、医学院入学考试(MCAT)成绩和本科平均绩点相同的非参与者进行匹配。我们比较了第一步考试成绩和学业成绩。一个在线调查工具收集了学生对PrEP项目有效性的看法以及关于学业准备情况的回顾性前后问题。尽管后者的MCAT成绩和平均绩点更高,但PrEP学生的学业成果与匹配的对照组相当。学生们重视他们建立的牢固项目关系,这些关系确保了他们在医学院学习期间有学习伙伴并能获得情感支持。学生们报告说,PrEP增加了生物化学知识,提高了学习技能,使他们熟悉了医学院的流程,并向他们介绍了主动学习教学法。他们对有机会学习医学表示感激。他们觉得该项目增强了他们的信心,鼓励了职业身份探索,并且他们的多样经历和挑战得到了重视。结果重申了社会学习环境的重要性,通过建立真诚且持久的关系来提高学业成绩的潜力,以及随后在医学院学习中信心增长的潜力。相互关联的课程内容通过学习策略强化了新的学习和学生信心。教育背景不佳的学生取得成功的重要目标包括与重要的教师和学生同事建立这些信任关系。信心和信任有机会随着真实的成绩成功而增长,这些成功由有同理心的同龄人及教师见证、分享和确认。