Tags

Type your tag names separated by a space and hit enter

The influence of tutor qualification on the process and outcome of learning in a problem-based course of basic medical pharmacology.
Naunyn Schmiedebergs Arch Pharmacol. 2002 Jul; 366(1):58-63.NS

Abstract

Limited access to expert tutors is a problem that can be addressed by using tutors from different stages of medical or non-medical (under-, post-) graduate education. To address whether such differences in qualification affect the results of process evaluation by participants or their learning outcome (exam results), we analysed the data of a 4-year prospective study performed with 787 3rd-year medical students (111 groups of 5-10 participants) taking an obligatory problem-based learning (PbL)-course of basic pharmacology. We compared peer tutors (undergraduate medical students, >/=4th year), non-expert (junior) staff tutors (physicians, pharmacists, veterinarians, biologists, or chemists during postgraduate education), and expert (senior) staff tutors (completed postgraduate education). Evaluation scores related to PbL gave the highest values for senior staff-led groups. The tutor's performance score of peer-led groups did not differ from those of staff-led groups, but the score obtained from groups tutored by junior staff was lower than that obtained with senior staff tutors. Students' weekly preparation time tended to be lower in peer-led groups, while learning time spent specifically on exam preparation seemed to be increased compared to PbL-groups of staff tutors. As a putative confounding variable, tutors' experience in coaching PbL-groups was also investigated. Groups led by experienced tutors, defined as tutors with at least one term of previous PbL tutoring, were found to have significantly higher evaluation scores. Interestingly, neither tutors' subject-matter expertise (peer students, junior staff, or senior staff) nor their teaching-method expertise showed any influence on PbL-groups' mean test scores in a written exam. This indicates that the effect of tutor expertise on the learning process is not associated with a difference in learning outcome when just factual knowledge is assessed by traditional methods.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Pharmacology, University of Cologne, Gleueler Strasse 24, 50931 Köln, Germany.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

12107634

Citation

Matthes, Jan, et al. "The Influence of Tutor Qualification On the Process and Outcome of Learning in a Problem-based Course of Basic Medical Pharmacology." Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's Archives of Pharmacology, vol. 366, no. 1, 2002, pp. 58-63.
Matthes J, Marxen B, Linke RM, et al. The influence of tutor qualification on the process and outcome of learning in a problem-based course of basic medical pharmacology. Naunyn Schmiedebergs Arch Pharmacol. 2002;366(1):58-63.
Matthes, J., Marxen, B., Linke, R. M., Antepohl, W., Coburger, S., Christ, H., Lehmacher, W., & Herzig, S. (2002). The influence of tutor qualification on the process and outcome of learning in a problem-based course of basic medical pharmacology. Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's Archives of Pharmacology, 366(1), 58-63.
Matthes J, et al. The Influence of Tutor Qualification On the Process and Outcome of Learning in a Problem-based Course of Basic Medical Pharmacology. Naunyn Schmiedebergs Arch Pharmacol. 2002;366(1):58-63. PubMed PMID: 12107634.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - The influence of tutor qualification on the process and outcome of learning in a problem-based course of basic medical pharmacology. AU - Matthes,Jan, AU - Marxen,Bent, AU - Linke,Ralph-Mario, AU - Antepohl,Wolfram, AU - Coburger,Silke, AU - Christ,Hildegard, AU - Lehmacher,Walter, AU - Herzig,Stefan, Y1 - 2002/04/19/ PY - 2002/02/20/accepted PY - 2002/7/11/pubmed PY - 2002/12/27/medline PY - 2002/7/11/entrez SP - 58 EP - 63 JF - Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's archives of pharmacology JO - Naunyn Schmiedebergs Arch Pharmacol VL - 366 IS - 1 N2 - Limited access to expert tutors is a problem that can be addressed by using tutors from different stages of medical or non-medical (under-, post-) graduate education. To address whether such differences in qualification affect the results of process evaluation by participants or their learning outcome (exam results), we analysed the data of a 4-year prospective study performed with 787 3rd-year medical students (111 groups of 5-10 participants) taking an obligatory problem-based learning (PbL)-course of basic pharmacology. We compared peer tutors (undergraduate medical students, >/=4th year), non-expert (junior) staff tutors (physicians, pharmacists, veterinarians, biologists, or chemists during postgraduate education), and expert (senior) staff tutors (completed postgraduate education). Evaluation scores related to PbL gave the highest values for senior staff-led groups. The tutor's performance score of peer-led groups did not differ from those of staff-led groups, but the score obtained from groups tutored by junior staff was lower than that obtained with senior staff tutors. Students' weekly preparation time tended to be lower in peer-led groups, while learning time spent specifically on exam preparation seemed to be increased compared to PbL-groups of staff tutors. As a putative confounding variable, tutors' experience in coaching PbL-groups was also investigated. Groups led by experienced tutors, defined as tutors with at least one term of previous PbL tutoring, were found to have significantly higher evaluation scores. Interestingly, neither tutors' subject-matter expertise (peer students, junior staff, or senior staff) nor their teaching-method expertise showed any influence on PbL-groups' mean test scores in a written exam. This indicates that the effect of tutor expertise on the learning process is not associated with a difference in learning outcome when just factual knowledge is assessed by traditional methods. SN - 0028-1298 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/12107634/The_influence_of_tutor_qualification_on_the_process_and_outcome_of_learning_in_a_problem_based_course_of_basic_medical_pharmacology_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -