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Abstract Teaching electrocardiography is a very important area in undergraduate student training. A constant concern of professors is for physicians in training to acquire competence in reading and interpreting electrocardiograms (EKGs). This study describes and explores how the didactic strat egy of peer teaching improves learning processes for second-year medical students. Evidence was found that peer teaching fosters significant learning of cardiac physiology and electrocardiograms, in particular, because it allows students to acquire abilities and skills in EKG reading, and improves the understanding and interpretation of this test. In addition, it promotes horizontal peer relationships which facilitate the development of autonomy, self-learning and teamwork. (Acta Med Colomb 2021; 46. DOI:https://doi.org/10.36104/amc.2021.1971).
Resumen La enseñanza de la electrocardiografía es un área de gran importancia en la formación de los estudiantes de pregrado, para los docentes es una preocupación constante que los médicos en for mación adquieran las competencias para la lectura e interpretación del electrocardiograma (ECG). El presente estudio describe e indaga sobre cómo la estrategia didáctica de la enseñanza por pares mejora los procesos de aprendizaje de los estudiantes de segundo año de formación médica. Se halló evidencia de que la enseñanza por pares favorece el aprendizaje significativo de la fisiología cardiaca y del electrocardiograma, en particular, porque permite la adquisición de habilidades y destrezas a los estudiantes en la lectura del ECG y mejora la comprensión e interpretación de dicho examen; además, propicia relaciones horizontales entre pares que facilitan el desarrollo de la autonomía, el autoaprendizaje y el trabajo en equipo. (Acta Med Colomb 2021; 46. DOI:doi.org/10.36104/amc.2021.1971).
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Context: Peer-assisted teaching and learning (PTL) is being experimented in different medical universities worldwide. It is a learner-centered approach involving students through active learning strategies. Aims: To study the student perception of PTL in methods such as group-led seminars and fishbowls, in classroom through various interactive activities; compare and find out the student acceptability and efficacy of each of these methods in learning conceptual topics such as various types of anemia. Subjects and Methods: Medical students of second-year professional course were subjected to PTL in classroom during allotted teaching hours for 10 successive sessions using group-led modified seminars, fishbowls, and different formality-level interactive activities such as street plays, prop sessions, quiz sessions, to make them understand the clinical features and presentation of different types of anemia through understanding of etio-pathogenesis. To ascertain the aspects that influenced learning, focus group discussions were conducted in small groups consisting of 14 students and one facilitator in each group. Qualitative thematic analysis was performed on transcripts of the audio recordings by authors. Results: The emerging themes from qualitative analysis of transcripts were pertaining to teacher, student, and organization. We found motivation, interest, and involvement of peer teacher, student behavior and collaboration, contact time between students and facilitator, preparation time, coherence with other curricular activities, group size and composition, suitability of topic for the kind of activity, and availability of material for preparation as few sub-aspects affecting learning. Conclusion: For PTL to be effective, adequate transfer of knowledge through good peer teacher involvement, learner receptiveness, and adequate contact time is needed. Proper preparation with suitability of topics for the type of activity, alignment of seminars with other activities, and course coherence are prerequisites for the same.
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Students of clinical medicine are the main reserve forces of clinicians,soit is necessary to train medical students' teaching ability at undergraduate level.As one of the important methods to improve the teaching ability of medical students,peer-teaching is widely used in foreign medical colleges.Peer-teaching involves the teacher and learner who are both medical students.After independent learning,the students served as teachers take the form ofindividualor group teaching and formal or informal teaching to teach the learners.Peer-teaching improves the students' self-learning ability,stimulates the enthusiasm of learning,and cultivates the students' teamwork ability,so it is worthy of being a reference for domestic medical colleges.
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The reformation of medical curriculum induced the reduction of anatomy course schedule especially in contact hours in anatomy laboratory. It has led to the use of more efficient teaching approaches in anatomy laboratory. The purpose of this work provide a detailed analysis of alternating dissections with reciprocal peer teaching in anatomy laboratory. Students were assigned alphabetically, in teams of eight or nine, to each dissecting table. The team was subdivided into two groups, A and B, each group dissected every other session. Students excused from dissection spent their time with team-based learning and self-directed learning. Dissected peer-teaching groups presented structures from the dissection to groups absent during dissection. Practical exam scores of the alternating dissection indicated no significant difference with those of classical dissection of previous year. Subgroup analysis of practical exam scores in alternating dissection was also no significant difference between group A and B. Assessment of question types showed that correction rates of questions in the dissected region was significantly higher on dissection group assignment. There were 9 questions (out of 86) in which there was a significant difference in correction rates between A and B groups. In conclusion, the laboratory paradigm of alternating dissection with reciprocal peer teaching demonstrated an effective method of learning gross anatomy laboratory for first year medical students.