WHO Collaborating Centre (DEN-62), Clinical Health Promotion Centre, The Parker Institute, Bispebjerg & Frederiksberg Hospital, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, 2400, Denmark.
Copenhagen Academy for Medical Education and Simulation (CAMES), Centre for HR and Education, The Capital Region of Denmark, Copenhagen, 2100, Denmark.
BMC Med Educ. 2024 Aug 26;24(1):927. doi: 10.1186/s12909-024-05915-z.
The disruption of health and medical education by the COVID-19 pandemic made educators question the effect of online setting on students' learning, motivation, self-efficacy and preference. In light of the health care staff shortage online scalable education seemed relevant. Reviews on the effect of online medical education called for high quality RCTs, which are increasingly relevant with rapid technological development and widespread adaption of online learning in universities. The objective of this trial is to compare standardized and feasible outcomes of an online and an onsite setting of a research course regarding the efficacy for PhD students within health and medical sciences: Primarily on learning of research methodology and secondly on preference, motivation, self-efficacy on short term and academic achievements on long term. Based on the authors experience with conducting courses during the pandemic, the hypothesis is that student preferred onsite setting is different to online setting.
Cluster randomized trial with two parallel groups. Two PhD research training courses at the University of Copenhagen are randomized to online (Zoom) or onsite (The Parker Institute, Denmark) setting. Enrolled students are invited to participate in the study. Primary outcome is short term learning. Secondary outcomes are short term preference, motivation, self-efficacy, and long-term academic achievements. Standardized, reproducible and feasible outcomes will be measured by tailor made multiple choice questionnaires, evaluation survey, frequently used Intrinsic Motivation Inventory, Single Item Self-Efficacy Question, and Google Scholar publication data. Sample size is calculated to 20 clusters and courses are randomized by a computer random number generator. Statistical analyses will be performed blinded by an external statistical expert.
Primary outcome and secondary significant outcomes will be compared and contrasted with relevant literature. Limitations include geographical setting; bias include lack of blinding and strengths are robust assessment methods in a well-established conceptual framework. Generalizability to PhD education in other disciplines is high. Results of this study will both have implications for students and educators involved in research training courses in health and medical education and for the patients who ultimately benefits from this training.
Retrospectively registered at ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT05736627. SPIRIT guidelines are followed.
COVID-19 大流行扰乱了医疗保健和医学教育,这使得教育工作者开始质疑在线环境对学生学习、动机、自我效能感和偏好的影响。鉴于医疗保健人员短缺,在线可扩展教育似乎具有相关性。有关在线医学教育效果的综述呼吁进行高质量的 RCT,随着技术的快速发展和在线学习在大学中的广泛应用,这些 RCT 变得越来越重要。本试验的目的是比较在线和现场研究课程设置在健康和医学科学博士生中的效果,主要是研究方法的学习,其次是短期的偏好、动机、自我效能感以及长期的学术成就。基于作者在大流行期间开展课程的经验,假设是学生更喜欢现场设置而不是在线设置。
采用两平行组的集群随机试验。哥本哈根大学的两个博士研究培训课程随机分为在线(Zoom)或现场(丹麦 Parker 研究所)设置。邀请注册学生参与研究。主要结局是短期学习。次要结局是短期偏好、动机、自我效能感和长期学术成就。通过定制的多项选择题问卷、评估调查、常用内在动机量表、单项自我效能感问题和谷歌学术出版物数据,测量标准化、可重复和可行的结果。根据 20 个集群计算样本量,并通过计算机随机数生成器对课程进行随机分组。统计分析将由外部统计专家进行盲法处理。
将主要结局和次要显著结局与相关文献进行比较和对比。局限性包括地理位置;偏倚包括缺乏盲法,优势是在既定概念框架下采用了稳健的评估方法。在其他学科的博士教育中具有高度的可推广性。本研究的结果将对参与健康和医学教育研究培训课程的学生和教育工作者以及最终从这种培训中受益的患者产生影响。
在 ClinicalTrials.gov 上进行了回顾性注册:NCT05736627。遵循了 SPIRIT 指南。