| Literature DB >> 23737922 |
Rainer Büscher1, Dominik Weber, Anja Büscher, Maite Hölscher, Sandra Pohlhuis, Bernhard Groes, Peter F Hoyer.
Abstract
Since 1986 medical students at the University Children's Hospital Essen are trained as peers in a two week intensive course in order to teach basic paediatric examination techniques to younger students. Student peers are employed by the University for one year. Emphasis of the peer teaching program is laid on the mediation of affective and sensomotorical skills e.g. get into contact with parents and children, as well as manual paediatric examination techniques. The aim of this study is to analyse whether student peers are able to impart specific paediatric examination skills as good as an experienced senior paediatric lecturer. 123 students were randomly assigned to a group with either a senior lecturer or a student peer teacher. Following one-hour teaching-sessions in small groups students had to demonstrate the learned skills in a 10 minute modified OSCE. In comparison to a control group consisting of 23 students who never examined a child before, both groups achieved a significantly better result. Medical students taught by student peers almost reached the same examination result as the group taught by paediatric teachers (21,7±4,1 vs. 22,6±3,6 of 36 points, p=0,203). Especially the part of the OSCE where exclusively practical skills where examined revealed no difference between the two groups (7,44±2,15 vs. 7,97±1,87 of a maximum of 16 points, p=0,154). The majority of students (77%) evaluated peer teaching as stimulating and helpful. The results of this quantitative teaching study reveal that peer teaching of selected skills can be a useful addition to classical paediatric teaching classes.Entities:
Keywords: Pediatrics; Peer teaching; basic skills; evaluation; tutor
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23737922 PMCID: PMC3671321 DOI: 10.3205/zma000868
Source DB: PubMed Journal: GMS Z Med Ausbild ISSN: 1860-3572
Figure 1Overall results of the OSCE for all groups. A maximum of 38 points could be reached. Students taught by a SPT achieved a similar amount of points when compared to the group taught by a SL.
Figure 2Frequency of the OSCE-results of all students (n=123) in the randomized study.
Figure 3Means of results reached in all different exercises of the OSCE.
Results of controls, tutors, SPT- and SL-groups are presented (Fig. 3). In addition, SPT- and SL-groups are separately displayed (Fig. 4). In this randomized trial significant differences were only observed in exercise 4 (medical report; SL vs. SPT p=0.04). More statistical analyses are given in table 1.
Figure 4Typical examination situation as shown in the video.
In 30 cases the OSCE was filmed and evaluated by an external examiner.
Table 1Statistical differences between groups in the OSCE.
P-values for independent groups were analyzed using a two-sided t-test. Significant differences are highlighted in gray fields (p<0.05).