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1.
Eur J Dent Educ ; 8(2): 72-7, 2004 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15059083

ABSTRACT

This study examined the impact of implementing a rotating dissection schedule on the attitudes and performance of first-year dental students in the gross anatomy laboratory at the University of Kentucky. In 2002-2003, half of the students assigned to each cadaver dissected the assigned objectives during the first 90 min of the laboratory session. During the last 30 min, the non-dissecting group members came into the laboratory and had the day's dissection demonstrated and explained to them via peer instruction. Dissection responsibilities rotated with each laboratory session. Eighty-eight percent of student participants were satisfied with the rotating dissection approach according to a mid-term survey, and this satisfaction level remained unchanged at the end of the semester for most students. Students' perceptions of the quality of peer laboratory presentations varied, with only 44% rating them as good or better. Eighty percent of students perceived that rotating dissection did not impede their performance, and this was confirmed by analysis of grade data. Student satisfaction and the ability to devote additional weekly curriculum time to studying anatomy in a very compressed curriculum were the main student-described benefits.


Subject(s)
Anatomy/education , Dissection/education , Education, Dental/methods , Teaching/methods , Female , Humans , Male , Peer Group
2.
J Dent Educ ; 67(3): 355-8, 2003 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12665065

ABSTRACT

This paper describes the curriculum design and enhancements of dental gross anatomy courses at three universities in North America. The greatest problem for gross anatomy faculty is making the regions of the body below the neck relevant to dental students for their future clinical education as well as the longer term dental practice. The proposed solutions demonstrated in the three courses range from satisfying the student's grade and test requirements, such as passing the anatomical sciences section of the National Board Dental Examination Part I, to making the material relevant to clinical dentistry. Strategies to increase relevance include incorporating clinical faculty into the gross anatomy course and integrating dental clinical material into the course. Lastly, pedagogical innovations include peer teaching, the use of the Internet and intranet for examination preparation, and the animation of dental procedures to illustrate relevant anatomy to dentistry.


Subject(s)
Anatomy/education , Education, Dental , Students, Dental , Computer Communication Networks , Curriculum , Educational Measurement , Humans , Internet , Kentucky , Mississippi , Multimedia , Peer Group , Program Development , Saskatchewan , Teaching/methods
3.
J Dent Educ ; 67(3): 359-65, 2003 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12665066

ABSTRACT

The predominant difference between the histology offered to dental students and that taken by other health care professionals is the emphasis placed on the oral tissues. The oral histology component of the dental curriculum is commonly handled in one of three ways, all delivering far more detailed information than the often less than one hour that a typical medical histology course spends on the oral cavity and its component tissues. Overall, three general curricular styles can be defined: 1) dental histology is taught by medical or dental faculty as a separate course, the oral histology component being a separate course taught by either faculty group; 2) medical and dental students take histology together in a single class with the oral histology component taught separately by faculty from either college; and 3) both basic and oral histology is taught within a single semester, the format used at the University of Kentucky College of Dentistry. The oral histology topics are similar in all of the course formats, regardless of whether they occur as a stand-alone course or are merged with basic histology. The main portion of this paper will describe a self-study, non-microscope-based laboratory experience designed to complement this fused topic course. Self-study labs using digital media are becoming more popular across both medical and dental histology curricula, specifically with the oral histology component where the histological skills for preparing these tissues are rapidly disappearing from many schools. This paper describes a typical syllabus for a fused course, outlining the topics for basic and oral histology, and demonstrates how the laboratory portion has been enhanced using digital technology.


Subject(s)
Computer-Assisted Instruction , Curriculum , Education, Dental , Histology/education , CD-ROM , Education, Dental/organization & administration , Educational Measurement , Histology/organization & administration , Humans , Kentucky , Multimedia , Program Evaluation , Programmed Instructions as Topic , Software , Teaching/methods , User-Computer Interface
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