BACKGROUND: The lockdown strategy adopted to contain the spread of current pandemic of coronavirus disease has affected all sectors of life globally. Nepal also instructed all the educational institutions to shut down, medical colleges being no exception. One month into the lockdown all the medical colleges in Nepal started online classes to keep pace with the academic calendar. This preliminary survey analyses the students' perspective on newly introduced online medical education system. METHODS: This cross-sectional survey used an online questionnaire typed in Google forms. The link to the survey was then emailed to the student representative of each semester of Lumbini Medical College, Palpa, Nepal, who were then instructed to forward it to their classmates. The questionnaire consisted of demographic variables and perspective of medical undergraduates towards online classes and also a space to comment or opine their perspective on current medical education. RESULTS: A total of 226 students responded the survey. Almost one-third of the students (n=173, 76.5%) admitted of never having attended the online classes. Most of the students used smartphones to attend online classes; broadband internet service being the source of internet in 65.5%. Two-third of the students rated online classes to be poorer than the traditional classroom teaching and 77.8% of the students preferred traditional classroom teaching in future. CONCLUSIONS: Medical students did not find online classes as effective as the traditional classroom teachings; it could be made more interactive and productive by introducing interactive and brainstorming sessions complementing the conventional face?to?face education.
BACKGROUND: The lockdown strategy adopted to contain the spread of current pandemic of coronavirus disease has affected all sectors of life globally. Nepal also instructed all the educational institutions to shut down, medical colleges being no exception. One month into the lockdown all the medical colleges in Nepal started online classes to keep pace with the academic calendar. This preliminary survey analyses the students' perspective on newly introduced online medical education system. METHODS: This cross-sectional survey used an online questionnaire typed in Google forms. The link to the survey was then emailed to the student representative of each semester of Lumbini Medical College, Palpa, Nepal, who were then instructed to forward it to their classmates. The questionnaire consisted of demographic variables and perspective of medical undergraduates towards online classes and also a space to comment or opine their perspective on current medical education. RESULTS: A total of 226 students responded the survey. Almost one-third of the students (n=173, 76.5%) admitted of never having attended the online classes. Most of the students used smartphones to attend online classes; broadband internet service being the source of internet in 65.5%. Two-third of the students rated online classes to be poorer than the traditional classroom teaching and 77.8% of the students preferred traditional classroom teaching in future. CONCLUSIONS: Medical students did not find online classes as effective as the traditional classroom teachings; it could be made more interactive and productive by introducing interactive and brainstorming sessions complementing the conventional face?to?face education.
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Keywords:
COVID-19; medical education Nepal; online education; virtual education.
Authors: Ali Aahil Noorali; Maha Inam; Hamna Shahbaz; Hareem Rauf; Faiqa Binte Aamir; Farah Khalid; Saadia Abbas; Abdullah Saeed; Muhammad Daniyal Musharraf; Asma Altaf Hussain Merchant; Babar S Hasan; Muneera A Rasheed; Fyezah Jehan; Muhammad Tariq; Adil Hussain Haider Journal: Front Public Health Date: 2022-01-10
Authors: Maximilian Riedel; Niklas Amann; Florian Recker; André Hennigs; Sabine Heublein; Bastian Meyer; Anne Karge; Gabriel Eisenkolb; Jacqueline Lammert; Anna Graf; Evelyn Klein; Martin Weiss; Fabian Riedel Journal: PLoS One Date: 2022-08-05 Impact factor: 3.752