Literature DB >> 12228095

MEDICOL: online learning in medicine and dentistry.

Marc Broudo1, Charlene Walsh.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: MEDICOL (Medicine and Dentistry Integrated Curriculum Online) provides a variety of Web-based resources that act as important adjuncts to all the teaching components of the medical and dental undergraduate curriculum. It uses WebCT, a course-management system, to provide the following educational functions: (1) track students' progress and present course information such as time-tables, learning objectives, handout materials, images, references, course assignments, and evaluations; (2) promote student-to-student and student-to-instructor interactions (through e-mail and bulletin boards); and (3) deliver self-directed learning components, including weekly self-assessment quizzes that provide immediate feedback and multimedia learning modules (clinical skills, radiology, evidence-based medicine, etc.). DESCRIPTION: The University of British Columbia Faculties of Medicine and Dentistry feature a problem-based learning (PBL) curriculum in which students access many of the same tools they will utilize in their professional practice. In the PBL curriculum, students must access the relevant clinical data and educational resources. A MEDICOL site has also been developed for medical students to use during their rural family practice, a four- to six-week experience in the summer after their second year. This site has been designed to be a supplemental learning environment for not only these students, but also for their physician preceptors. It is intended to foster communication among participants, bring new resources to the rural setting, and allow preceptors to develop their Internet skills with the help of students who are already familiar with the electronic environment. The MEDICOL sites enable the exchange of information about the learning issues between, as well as within, tutorial groups. MEDICOL also provides students with faculty-reviewed resources that are listed online; multimedia presentations; and access to histology, radiology, and pathology images through an online image database. Each week, students have access to a new interactive and automatically graded self-assessment quiz for individual study. These quizzes test learning objectives from tutorial, lecture, and lab material for each week of the curriculum and are modeled after summative examinations held twice each year. Question authors provide immediately accessible quality feedback to students. A comprehensive quiz databank of approximately 1,500 questions has been attained. WebCT enables MEDICOL to deliver anonymous, online program-evaluation questionnaires during clinical clerkships (resulting in a 99% response rate after a few e-mail reminders), with easy and timely data collection and reporting methods. Summative assessments have also been delivered through MEDICOL. DISCUSSION: Use statistics indicate that over 90% of students regularly use the MEDICOL sites and have found them helpful. University of British Columbia medical school enrollment will increase because of collaborations with campuses and medical centers across the province. MEDICOL will likely play an increased role in distance learning by continuing to deliver the resources already described, as well as facilitating synchronous communications (e.g., PBL chat rooms) and teaching (e.g., video-streamed lectures) to students located across the province.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12228095     DOI: 10.1097/00001888-200209000-00028

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acad Med        ISSN: 1040-2446            Impact factor:   6.893


  5 in total

1.  www.PedRad.info, the first bilingual case-oriented publication platform for pediatric radiology.

Authors:  Wolfgang Hirsch; Martina Paetzel; Roland Talanow
Journal:  Pediatr Radiol       Date:  2004-10-16

2.  E learning in surgery.

Authors:  Kamal Raj Aryal; Jerome Pereira
Journal:  Indian J Surg       Date:  2014-05-12       Impact factor: 0.656

3.  Computer model for the cardiovascular system: development of an e-learning tool for teaching of medical students.

Authors:  David Roy Warriner; Martin Bayley; Yubing Shi; Patricia Victoria Lawford; Andrew Narracott; John Fenner
Journal:  BMC Med Educ       Date:  2017-11-21       Impact factor: 2.463

4.  Perceived Barriers to Career Progression Among Early-Career Epidemiologists: Report of a Workshop at the 22nd World Congress of Epidemiology.

Authors:  Hiroyuki Kikuchi; Keisuke Kuwahara; Kosuke Kiyohara; Ester Villalonga-Olives; Naomi Brewer; Abimbola Aman-Oloniyo; Pradeep Aggarwal; María Clara Restrepo-Méndez; Azusa Hara; Masako Kakizaki; Yuka Akiyama; Kazunari Onishi; Kayo Kurotani; Maho Haseda; Shiho Amagasa; Isao Oze
Journal:  J Epidemiol       Date:  2018-10-06       Impact factor: 3.211

5.  Perception of E-Resources on the Learning Process among Students in the College of Health Sciences in King Saud University, Saudi Arabia, during the (COVID-19) Outbreak.

Authors:  Reham AlJasser; Lina Alolyet; Daniyah Alsuhaibani; Sarah Albalawi; Md Dilshad Manzar; Abdulrhman Albougami
Journal:  Healthcare (Basel)       Date:  2021-12-26
  5 in total

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