| Literature DB >> 34046522 |
Matthew D Krasowski1, John L Blau1, Stephanie J Chen1, Karra A Jones1, Thomas J Schmidt2, Leslie A Bruch1.
Abstract
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has had a major impact on education at all age levels, including professional schools and health professions programs. We describe the experience of adapting preclinical medical school courses within an integrated curriculum to virtual instruction. A major feature of two of the courses were pathology small groups adapted from pathology courses in the previous medical school curriculum. These small groups were designed to use facilitated groups of 8 to 10 students. With a sudden change to virtual learning, these small groups were shifted to large group virtual sessions. In general, the conversion went well, with ongoing optimization of the format of the large group sessions mainly occurring over the first several sessions. End-of-course student evaluations were generally positive, but with a preference toward returning to live sessions in the future. Scores on 5 multiple choice examinations in the spring 2020 course were essentially identical in mean, standard deviation, and distribution to examinations in the previous 2 years of the course that had similar layout and topic organization. We discuss the challenges and successes of the switch to virtual instruction and of teaching pathology content within an integrated medical school curriculum.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; course director; disease mechanisms; educational cases; integrated curricula; medical school pathology; pathology education; virtual teaching
Year: 2021 PMID: 34046522 PMCID: PMC8138288 DOI: 10.1177/23742895211015337
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acad Pathol ISSN: 2374-2895
Comparison of Previous and Current Curriculum.
| Curriculum content | Previous curriculum through 2014* | Integrated curriculum (2015-)* |
|---|---|---|
| Preclinical courses | 24 months | 18 months |
| Main Pathology Content | Medical Pathology I and II (M2 year) | MOHD II, III, IV (M1/M2 years) |
| Exposure to Pathology Laboratories | Student selectives (2 hours) | Tour of core clinical laboratories (45 minutes) |
| Forensic/autopsy content | Participation in autopsy on request | Participation in autopsy on request |
| Pathology small groups | Throughout both semesters of Medical Pathology (2 hours/session × 23 sessions) | In the MOHD II-IV courses (1.5 hours/session × 15 sessions) |
Abbreviations: M1, first year of medical school; M2, second year of medical school; MOHD, Mechanisms of Health and Disease.
* The new curriculum impacting pathology content began with spring semester of 2015 for M1 students.
Changes in Switch to Online Teaching in Mechanisms of Health and Disease (MOHD) III Course.
| Teaching method | Pre-COVID | Online (mid-March 2020) | Required participation?* |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lectures | Live, recorded | Pre-recorded or live Zoom | No |
| Quizzes | Online | Online | Yes |
| Examinations | Multiple choice, proctored on-campus | Can be taken remotely | Yes |
| Pathology small groups | 8-10 students with facilitator† | Single large group Zoom† | Yes |
| Laboratory tours | Attend 45 minutes tour | Cancelled‡ | Yes |
Abbreviation: LabCAPS, Laboratory—Computer Assisted Patient Simulation.
* The participation requirements applied to both pre-COVID and online.
† The spring semester typically has a total of 10 sessions with facilitators. In spring semester 2020, a total of 8 sessions were adapted to large group Zoom format.
‡ Half of the class was able to participate in the live laboratory tours prior to COVID restrictions. The tours were cancelled for the remainder of the class due to timing of COVID restrictions. A virtual format will be used for spring semester 2021.
Pathology Small Group Descriptions.
| Activity | Approximate time/case | Live | Online |
|---|---|---|---|
| Case analysis/LabCAPS | 30 minutes |
Students assume different roles (clinician vs pathologist) for each regular case; show their work to group for LabCAPS Graded on preparation and participation by facilitator |
Faculty presenter(s) runs through cases with interspersed poll/quiz questions Student preparation prior to session captured online Student attendance (participation) captured via Report function of Zoom |
| Gross specimens | 45 mins gross specimens |
Examine gross specimens Small group classroom |
Virtual presentations by faculty Used some outside videos |
Abbreviation: LabCAPS, Laboratory—Computer Assisted Patient Simulation.
Figure 1.Examination scores (mean ± error bars showing standard deviation) for the 5 multiple-choice examinations for the MOHD III course (N = 174 for the 2018 and 2019 courses; N = 172 for the 2020 course). The course content over the 3 years shown was very similarly divided over the blocks of the course, with the 2019 and 2020 courses virtually identical except that the 2020 course used virtual instruction for all but 1 week of the course. For all examinations, the highest student score was 100% except for 98% in examination #5 in 2018. The lowest scores for the 5 examinations were (values indicate 2018, 2019, 2020, respectively): examination 1 (63%, 43%, 58%), examination 2 (58%, 60%, 67%), examination 3 (55%, 56%, 61%), examination 4 (58%, 60%, 59%), examination 5 (54%, 51%, 57%). MOHD indicates Mechanisms of Health and Disease.