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1.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14739758

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To compare the effects of active and didactic teaching strategies on learning- and process-oriented outcomes. DESIGN: Controlled trial. SETTING: After-hours residents' teaching session. PARTICIPANTS: Family and Community Medicine, Internal Medicine, and Pediatrics residents at two academic medical institutions. INTERVENTIONS: We randomly assigned residents to two groups. One group received a didactic lecture on effective use of diagnostic tests; during this session, the teacher spent a full hour delivering content. The other group received the same content in a session structured to foster resident-to-resident interactions. In the latter session, the teacher spent only 30 minutes directly delivering content to residents. MEASURES AND MAIN RESULTS: We measured residents' knowledge about and attitudes toward the session content before, immediately after, and one month after each session. We measured residents' perceptions of engagement and session value immediately after each session. We employed blinded observers who used a structured instrument to observe residents' activities during each session. Both teaching methods led to improvements in residents' scores on both knowledge and attitude assessments. The amount of improvement was not statistically different between groups. Residents in the active learning session perceived themselves, and were observed to be, more engaged with the session content and each other than residents in the didactic session. Residents in the didactic session perceived greater educational value from the session compared to residents in the active session. CONCLUSIONS: We reduced the amount of time spent in teacher-driven content delivery by 50 percent and covered the same amount of content with no detrimental effects on knowledge acquisition or attitude enhancement. Teaching strategies that foster learner-to-learner interactions will lead to more active engagement among learners, however, these learners may value the session less. Further research is needed to explore learner perceptions of the teaching process and other outcomes of active learning in medical education.


Subject(s)
Group Processes , Problem-Based Learning , Adult , Diagnostic Techniques and Procedures , Evidence-Based Medicine , Female , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Humans , Internship and Residency , Male , Texas
2.
Eval Health Prof ; 26(1): 86-103, 2003 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12629924

ABSTRACT

Documenting student engagement has received increased emphasis in medical schools, as teaching strategies are changing to include more student-to-student interactions. The purpose of this study was to develop and evaluate a measure of student engagement completed by independent observers that would not interfere with student learning time. Data from 3,182 observations completed by nine observers in 32 educational classroom settings with 23 different instructors were used to evaluate the interobserver reliability and gather validity evidence for our observational instrument, named the STROBE. Results indicated that interobserver agreement was good to excellent when observations were conducted simultaneously on randomly selected students in the same classroom (84% average agreement and 0.79 average kappa coefficient) and when observations were conducted on different randomly selected students (79% average agreement). Results also provided strong evidence for validity. Overall, findings indicate that the STROBE demonstrates promise for educational research and evaluation by documenting student engagement in medical education settings.


Subject(s)
Health Occupations/education , Students, Health Occupations , Humans , Observer Variation , Reproducibility of Results
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