Wilson Ian, Shankar Pathiyil Ravi
International Medical University.
MedEdPublish (2016). 2021 Feb 11;10:44. doi: 10.15694/mep.2021.000044.1. eCollection 2021.
This article was migrated. The article was marked as recommended. Medical colleges closed in most countries in February-March due to the coronavirus pandemic and the need to ensure physical distancing. Many rapid changes to teaching/learning and assessment were carried out. Articles published on medical education during the pandemic were analyzed to answer three questions: What changes to undergraduate medical student teaching/learning have occurred during the last six months? What modifications to undergraduate medical student assessment have occurred during the corresponding time period and what are students' perceptions regarding these changes? English language articles published during the current year till 10 July were searched using the terms 'pandemic', 'coronavirus disease', 'COVID-19', 'undergraduate medical education', 'medical student assessment' and 'medical schools'. The online databases PubMed and Google Scholar were searched. The journal AMEE MedEdPublish was also searched. Articles dealing mainly with postgraduate education, continuing medical education, institutional preparedness, early graduation and joining the workforce were excluded. After narrowing down according to the selection criteria, and addressing duplication, a total of 62 unique articles were obtained. A total of 44 articles were on undergraduate teaching /learning during the pandemic and 10 articles mainly focused on assessment. A total of 8 articles mentioned student experiences of teaching/learning and assessment during the pandemic. Medical education migrated online during the pandemic. The transition may have been smoother for preclinical students as the content could be delivered remotely more easily. Moving clinical learning online has greater challenges. Medical students, especially in developing countries face greater challenges to learn remotely. Open book assessments have been used. E-portfolios, projects, exams with remote proctoring, online OSCE, online structured viva-voce have been carried out. Student perception about these changes were mixed. They were happy about being able to continue learning but maintaining focus and sustaining interest were challenges. Clinical learning has been particularly affected.
本文已迁移。该文章被标记为推荐。由于冠状病毒大流行以及确保社交距离的需要,2月至3月期间大多数国家的医学院校关闭。教学/学习和评估发生了许多快速变化。对大流行期间发表的医学教育相关文章进行分析,以回答三个问题:在过去六个月中,本科医学生的教学/学习发生了哪些变化?在相应时间段内,本科医学生评估有哪些调整,学生对这些变化有何看法?使用“大流行”“冠状病毒病”“COVID - 19”“本科医学教育”“医学生评估”和“医学院校”等关键词,搜索了本年度截至7月10日发表的英文文章。检索了在线数据库PubMed和谷歌学术。还检索了AMEE MedEdPublish期刊。主要涉及研究生教育、继续医学教育、机构准备、提前毕业和进入劳动力市场的文章被排除。根据选择标准进行筛选并处理重复文章后,共获得62篇独特文章。其中44篇文章涉及大流行期间的本科教学/学习,10篇文章主要关注评估。共有8篇文章提到了大流行期间学生的教学/学习和评估体验。大流行期间医学教育迁移到了线上。对于临床前学生来说,这种转变可能更顺利,因为教学内容可以更容易地远程传授。将临床学习转移到线上面临更大挑战。医学生,尤其是发展中国家的医学生,面临着更大的远程学习挑战。已采用开卷评估。开展了电子档案袋、项目、远程监考考试、在线客观结构化临床考试、在线结构化口试。学生对这些变化的看法不一。他们很高兴能够继续学习,但保持专注和维持兴趣是挑战。临床学习受到的影响尤为严重。