| Literature DB >> 24450310 |
Howard Spoelstra, Slavi Stoyanov, Louise Burgoyne, Deirdre Bennett, Catherine Sweeney, Hendrik Drachsler, Katrien Vanderperren, Sabine Van Huffel, John McSweeney, George Shorten, Siun O'Flynn, Padraig Cantillon-Murphy, Colm O'Tuathaigh1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Healthcare worldwide needs translation of basic ideas from engineering into the clinic. Consequently, there is increasing demand for graduates equipped with the knowledge and skills to apply interdisciplinary medicine/engineering approaches to the development of novel solutions for healthcare. The literature provides little guidance regarding barriers to, and facilitators of, effective interdisciplinary learning for engineering and medical students in a team-based project context.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24450310 PMCID: PMC3996181 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6920-14-14
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 2.463
Figure 1Total percentage values for staff and students across agreement ratings [1–5, from strongly disagree to strongly agree] for statements: A-B. Interdisciplinary learning is indispensible for professional development of students. C. Medical and engineering students rarely interact. D & E: Total percentage of Yes vs. No responses for staff and students for statement ‘All students in my course are creative’.
Figure 2Mean rankings for students’ learning styles [A] and staff teaching styles [B] on a scale of 1–4, where each of the styles are ranked according to preference.
Figure 3Staff and student agreement ratings for organizational issues. A. Total percentage values for staff and students across agreement ratings [1–5, from strongly disagree to strongly agree] for statement ‘Our educational curricula specifically addresses creativity and innovation’. B: Total percentage of Yes vs. No responses from staff for statement ‘My students are stimulated to take place in interdisciplinary learning’. C: Total percentage of Yes vs. No responses from staff for statement ‘Additional assessment of prior knowledge should be a required filtering mechanism before allowing access to an interdisciplinary module’.
Figure 4Mean ratings for staff and students’ preferred topics in course content – ratings on a scale of 1–5 from not important to most important.
Figure 5Mean ratings for staff [A] and students’ [B] preferred instructional approaches – ratings on a scale of 1–5 from not important to most important.