| Literature DB >> 32390876 |
Stefano Sandrone1,2, Jimmy V Berthaud1,3, Chad Carlson1,4, Jacquelyne Cios1,5, Neel Dixit1,6, Amtul Farheen1,7, Jessica Kraker1,8, James W M Owens1,9, Gustavo Patino1,10, Harini Sarva1,6, Daniel Weber1,11, Logan D Schneider1,12,13.
Abstract
Over the past few decades, medical education has seen increased interest in the use of active learning formats to engage learners and promote knowledge application over knowledge acquisition. The field of psychiatry, in particular, has pioneered a host of novel active learning paradigms. These have contributed to our understanding of the role of andragogy along the continuum of medical education, from undergraduate to continuing medical education. In an effort to frame the successes and failures of various attempts at integrating active learning into healthcare curricula, a group of educators from the A. B. Baker Section on Neurological Education from the American Academy of Neurology reviewed the state of the field in its partner field of medical neuroscience. Herein we provide a narrative review of the literature, outlining the basis for implementing active learning, the novel formats that have been used, and the lessons learned from qualitative and quantitative analysis of the research that has been done to date. While preparation time seems to present the greatest obstacle to acceptance from learners and educators, there is generally positive reception to the new educational formats. Additionally, most assessments of trainee performance have suggested non-inferiority (if not superiority). However, occasional mixed findings point to a need for better assessments of the type of learning that these new formats engender: knowledge application rather than acquisition. Moreover, this field is relatively nascent and, in order to ascertain how best to integrate active learning into psychiatry education, a framework for quantitative outcome assessments is needed going forward.Entities:
Keywords: active learning; clinical reasoning; curriculum design; flipped classroom; flipping the classroom; flipping the curriculum; psychiatry education
Year: 2020 PMID: 32390876 PMCID: PMC7190786 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2020.00211
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Figure 1Bloom's taxonomy in a traditional versus a flipped classroom (5). In a traditional classroom, information is often provided en masse to learners in a passive format, with the expectation that higher-order learning is achieved through self-directed learning. Comparatively, the active learning in a flipped classroom promotes higher-order cognitive domain activities in a variety of novel formats (problem-based learning, etc.) that build upon learner-lead knowledge exposure outside of the classroom.