| Literature DB >> 25405078 |
Natalia Stathakarou1, Nabil Zary1, Andrzej A Kononowicz2.
Abstract
Background. Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) are an emerging trend in online learning. However, their technology is not yet completely adjusted to the needs of healthcare education. Integration of Virtual Patients within MOOCs to increase interactivity and foster clinical reasoning skills training, has been discussed in the past, but not verified by a practical implementation. Objective. To investigate the technical feasibility of integrating MOOCs with Virtual Patients for the purpose of enabling further research into the potential pedagogical benefits of this approach. Methods. We selected OpenEdx and Open Labyrinth as representative constituents of a MOOC platform and Virtual Patient system integration. Based upon our prior experience we selected the most fundamental technical requirement to address. Grounded in the available literature we identified an e-learning standard to guide the integration. We attempted to demonstrate the feasibility of the integration by designing a "proof-of-concept" prototype. The resulting pilot implementation was subject of verification by two test cases. Results. A Single Sign-On mechanism connecting Open Labyrinth with OpenEdx and based on the IMS LTI standard was successfully implemented and verified. Conclusion. We investigated the technical perspective of integrating Virtual Patients with MOOCs. By addressing this crucial technical requirement we set a base for future research on the educational benefits of using virtual patients in MOOCs. This provides new opportunities for integrating specialized software in healthcare education at massive scale.Entities:
Keywords: Healthcare education; Integration; Massive open online courses; Virtual patients; e-learning
Year: 2014 PMID: 25405078 PMCID: PMC4232845 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.672
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Study protocol.
Figure 2Setting the LTI module within OpenEdx to register values of lti_id, key and secret.
Figure 3Creating a LTI component within the course, pointing at the Open Labyrinth’s server IP and including the lti_id value.
Test Case 1—an instructor gets authorized in Open Labyrinth in OpenEdx.
| Test Case id | 1 |
|---|---|
| Objective | An instructor logged into the OpenEdx platform is automatically authorized in |
| Result | Successful |
| Comment | Open Labyrinth authorizes the instructor, provides access to the content and authoring rights to the VP cases as a result of conforming to the BLTI standard |
Test Case 2—a learner gets authorized in Open Labyrinth in OpenEdx.
| Test Case id | 2 |
|---|---|
| Objective | A learner logged into the OpenEdx platform is automatically authorized in |
| Result | Successful |
| Comment | Open Labyrinth authorizes the learner and allows access to the VP case as a result of conforming to the BLTI standard |
Figure 4An instructor is authorized in Open Labyrinth to edit the learning content.
Figure 5A learner is authorized in Open Labyrinth to view the learning content.
Figure 6A learner accesses the VP case.