Interactive large-group teaching in a dermatology course.

Abstract:

:This is a prospective study to find out whether an interactive large-group case-based teaching approach combined with small-group bedside teaching improves student satisfaction and learning outcome in a practical dermatology course. During two consecutive terms a rotating system of large-group interactive case-study-method teaching with two tutors (one content expert, one process facilitator) and bedside teaching with randomly appointed tutors was evaluated with a nine-item questionnaire and multiple-choice test performed at the beginning and the end of the course (n = 204/231 students evaluable). The results of three different didactic approaches utilized over the prior year served as a control. The interactive course was rated significantly better (p < 0.0001) than the standard course with regard to all items. The aggregate mark given by the students for the whole course was 1.58-0.61 (mean +/- SD, range 1 (good)-5 (poor)). This was significantly better than the standard course (p < 0.0001) and not different from small-group teaching approaches. The mean test results in the final examination improved significantly (p < 0.01). The combination of large-group interactive teaching and small-group bedside teaching was well accepted, improved the learning outcome, was rated as good as a small-group didactic approach and needed fewer resources in terms of personnel.

journal_name

Med Teach

journal_title

Medical teacher

authors

Ochsendorf FR,Boehncke WH,Sommerlad M,Kaufmann R

doi

10.1080/01421590601034241

subject

Has Abstract

pub_date

2006-12-01 00:00:00

pages

697-701

issue

8

eissn

0142-159X

issn

1466-187X

pii

777037584

journal_volume

28

pub_type

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