AIM: Learning about professionalism occurs through collaboration, with peer groups being important sources of support for students [Sandars J, Homer M, Pell G, Croker T. 2008. Web 2.0 and social software: The medical student way of e-learning. Med Teach 14:1-5. Accessed 2008 February 14]. This study aimed to discover whether the use of wikis (collaborative websites) could enhance medical students' development of professionalism. METHODS: An online wiki was made available to four problem-based learning (PBL) groups, involving 32 students. Data collection comprised a small-scale student survey and four focus groups eliciting their views about wiki use, triangulated with facilitator interviews and wiki usage statistics. RESULTS: Several factors affected individual student and group engagement with wikis, such as positive group dynamics. Students shared web links, helping clarify PBL discussions and increase their confidence. CONCLUSIONS: Two main benefits of using wikis for the development of professionalism with medical students were revealed. First, wikis acted as a shared knowledge base for hard-to-find resources on professionalism. Second, it was precisely when students reflected on the difference between interacting in wikis and their online social spaces, or when they considered whether or not to post a resource that their sense of professionalism emerged.
AIM: Learning about professionalism occurs through collaboration, with peer groups being important sources of support for students [Sandars J, Homer M, Pell G, Croker T. 2008. Web 2.0 and social software: The medical student way of e-learning. Med Teach 14:1-5. Accessed 2008 February 14]. This study aimed to discover whether the use of wikis (collaborative websites) could enhance medical students' development of professionalism. METHODS: An online wiki was made available to four problem-based learning (PBL) groups, involving 32 students. Data collection comprised a small-scale student survey and four focus groups eliciting their views about wiki use, triangulated with facilitator interviews and wiki usage statistics. RESULTS: Several factors affected individual student and group engagement with wikis, such as positive group dynamics. Students shared web links, helping clarify PBL discussions and increase their confidence. CONCLUSIONS: Two main benefits of using wikis for the development of professionalism with medical students were revealed. First, wikis acted as a shared knowledge base for hard-to-find resources on professionalism. Second, it was precisely when students reflected on the difference between interacting in wikis and their online social spaces, or when they considered whether or not to post a resource that their sense of professionalism emerged.
Authors: Patrick M Archambault; Tom H van de Belt; Craig Kuziemsky; Ariane Plaisance; Audrey Dupuis; Carrie A McGinn; Rebecca Francois; Marie-Pierre Gagnon; Alexis F Turgeon; Tanya Horsley; William Witteman; Julien Poitras; Jean Lapointe; Kevin Brand; Jean Lachaine; France Légaré Journal: Cochrane Database Syst Rev Date: 2017-05-10
Authors: Patrick Michel Archambault; Tom H van de Belt; Francisco J Grajales Iii; Gunther Eysenbach; Karine Aubin; Irving Gold; Marie-Pierre Gagnon; Craig E Kuziemsky; Alexis F Turgeon; Julien Poitras; Marjan J Faber; Jan A M Kremer; Marcel Heldoorn; Andrea Bilodeau; France Légaré Journal: JMIR Res Protoc Date: 2012-04-11
Authors: Jacqueline L Bender; Laura A O'Grady; Amol Deshpande; Andrea A Cortinois; Luis Saffie; Don Husereau; Alejandro R Jadad Journal: Open Med Date: 2011-12-20