Carrillo Ryner Jose D, Dumlao Karen June P
Department of Anatomy, College of Medicine, University of the Philippines Manila.
Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, College of Medicine and Philippine General Hospital, University of the Philippines Manila.
Acta Med Philipp. 2023 Oct 26;57(10):39-44. doi: 10.47895/amp.v57i10.7045. eCollection 2023.
The pandemic has forced medical education to adopt online and hybrid set-ups, and this has greatly changed the way human anatomy is taught. Course-required knowledge can be accessed using raw references like original publications, collected reviews such as those found in books, as well as in shorter versions like summaries, and in online or electronic applications or software. With readily accessible online physical materials and human resources in anatomy, the value of learning by seeking out verifiable information to answer a real time query may change the current method of teaching and assessment of outcome-based learning in a heavy-recall subject such as human anatomy. For the student, sources of information or instruction are termed the "peripheral brain". The objective of this study is to describe the medical students' method in accessing medical information during a hybrid small group discussion.
In a modified hybrid laboratory set-up, a class of 200 students were divided into 18 groups, with two students in each group acting as laboratory dissector, who will broadcast their in-person classroom activities to the group members via zoom. The groups rotated in nine specimen stations consisting of soft-embalmed cadavers, plastinated specimen, models, bones, and VH dissector™ virtual dissector. Students were allowed to use any type of resources to accomplish the following tasks: 1) look for listed structures, 2) identify landmarks, and 3) describe functions. A Google sheet survey was administered a month after the activity on the following domains: search strategy, targeted references, and verifiability of information.
There were 110 students with age range of 19-27 years old, who participated in the study. Their most accessed reference is still personally prepared notes, followed by electronic books. When using ebooks, the first thing students reported exploring is the table of contents, followed by the search button. If doing online search, the key word used is the structure or function of interest. In group dynamics, students prefer to divide the work and assign tasks to each member, instead of collectively and simultaneously discussing a topic. For them, the most important characteristic of a reliable peripheral brain is that it is the recommended reference, followed by how current the reference is, i.e., published in the last 3 to 5 years. Interestingly, for most students, the information must be acquired in 5 minutes, which is contrary to the preferred mode of reference.Artificial intelligence may enhance SGDs according to most of the students. In accessing peripheral brain, Google is perceived as the quickest, books are most reliable, and Pubmed is the most up-to-date. Most of the students preferred pre-assigned questions or tasks during SGDs, with equal distribution of work. Giving and receiving remote instructions is not a problem. Dealing with a difficult group member is important, but is not a problem in hybrid discussion.
The survey results provide valuable insight on learning strategies used by the current generation of medical students, who have started medical school during the pandemic and are used to online teaching-learning modes of instruction. These findings can be exploited in designing course activities. The concept of peripheral brain in small group discussions can be formally introduced to students learning anatomy to utilize modern technology in enhancing knowledge.
疫情迫使医学教育采用线上和混合式教学模式,这极大地改变了人体解剖学的教学方式。课程所需知识可以通过原始参考文献(如原始出版物)、书籍中的综述、摘要等简短版本以及在线或电子应用程序或软件等原始资料获取。随着解剖学领域的线上实物资料和人力资源随手可得,通过寻找可验证信息来实时回答问题的学习方式,可能会改变当前像人体解剖学这样需要大量记忆的学科基于结果的学习的教学和评估方法。对于学生而言,信息或指导来源被称为“外围大脑”。本研究的目的是描述医学生在混合式小组讨论中获取医学信息的方法。
在改良的混合实验室设置中,将200名学生分为18组,每组两名学生担任实验室解剖员,他们将通过Zoom向小组成员直播其实时课堂活动。各小组在九个标本站轮流进行,标本站包括防腐尸体、塑化标本、模型、骨骼和VH解剖器™虚拟解剖器。学生可以使用任何类型的资源来完成以下任务:1)查找列出的结构,2)识别标志点,3)描述功能。活动开展一个月后,通过谷歌表格进行了一项关于以下方面的调查:搜索策略、目标参考文献以及信息的可验证性。
有110名年龄在19至27岁之间的学生参与了该研究。他们最常查阅的参考文献仍然是个人准备的笔记,其次是电子书。使用电子书时,学生报告首先探索的是目录,其次是搜索按钮。如果进行在线搜索,使用的关键词是感兴趣的结构或功能。在小组活动中,学生更喜欢分工并给每个成员分配任务,而不是集体同时讨论一个话题。对他们来说,可靠的“外围大脑”最重要的特征是它是推荐的参考文献,其次是参考文献的时效性,即是否在过去三到五年内发表。有趣的是,对大多数学生来说,信息必须在5分钟内获取,这与首选的参考文献模式相悖。大多数学生认为人工智能可以增强小组讨论。在获取“外围大脑”信息方面,谷歌被认为是最快的,书籍是最可靠的,而PubMed是最新的。大多数学生在小组讨论中更喜欢预先分配的问题或任务,并平均分配工作。远程给予和接收指导不是问题。应对难相处的小组成员很重要,但在混合式讨论中不是问题。
调查结果为当前这一代在疫情期间开始医学院学习并习惯在线教学模式的医学生所采用的学习策略提供了有价值的见解。这些发现可用于设计课程活动。在解剖学学习的学生中,可以正式引入小组讨论中“外围大脑”的概念,以利用现代技术增强知识。