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PBL curriculum improves medical students' participation in small-group tutorials.
Med Teach. 2007 Sep; 29(6):e198-203.MT

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Group learning is the core of problem-based learning (PBL) but has not been extensively studied, especially in Asian students.

METHODS

This study compared students of PBL and non-PBL curricula in students' talking time and participation in small-group tutorials in a medical school in Asia. The proportions of student talking of 46 tutorials in three teaching rotations of the PBL curriculum and those of 43 corresponding tutorials in the non-PBL curriculum were counted. Twelve videotapes of tutorials (six from each curriculum), stratified for tutor, case scenario and students' learning stage, were randomly selected and transcribed. They were rated with the group-interaction (5 items) and active-participation (four items) tutorial assessment scales developed by Valle et al. These outcomes were compared between the students of PBL and non-PBL curricula.

RESULTS

Students from the PBL curriculum talked significantly more. In only two (4.7%) of 43 tutorials in the non-PBL curriculum did the students talk more than the tutors; but students talked more than the tutors in 17 (37.0%) of 46 tutorials in the PBL curriculum. PBL students scored significantly higher than non-PBL students in all items except one item (respect to peers) of the tutorial assessment scales, and in the mean scores of both the group interaction scale (items 1-5) and the active participation scale (items 6-9).

CONCLUSIONS

The results suggested that PBL starting from the early years of a medical curriculum was associated with more active student participation, interaction and collaboration in small-group tutorials.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Family Medicine Unit, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Comparative Study
Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

17917990

Citation

Wun, Y T., et al. "PBL Curriculum Improves Medical Students' Participation in Small-group Tutorials." Medical Teacher, vol. 29, no. 6, 2007, pp. e198-203.
Wun YT, Tse EY, Lam TP, et al. PBL curriculum improves medical students' participation in small-group tutorials. Med Teach. 2007;29(6):e198-203.
Wun, Y. T., Tse, E. Y., Lam, T. P., & Lam, C. L. (2007). PBL curriculum improves medical students' participation in small-group tutorials. Medical Teacher, 29(6), e198-203.
Wun YT, et al. PBL Curriculum Improves Medical Students' Participation in Small-group Tutorials. Med Teach. 2007;29(6):e198-203. PubMed PMID: 17917990.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - PBL curriculum improves medical students' participation in small-group tutorials. AU - Wun,Y T, AU - Tse,Eileen Y Y, AU - Lam,T P, AU - Lam,Cindy L K, PY - 2007/10/6/pubmed PY - 2010/2/26/medline PY - 2007/10/6/entrez SP - e198 EP - 203 JF - Medical teacher JO - Med Teach VL - 29 IS - 6 N2 - BACKGROUND: Group learning is the core of problem-based learning (PBL) but has not been extensively studied, especially in Asian students. METHODS: This study compared students of PBL and non-PBL curricula in students' talking time and participation in small-group tutorials in a medical school in Asia. The proportions of student talking of 46 tutorials in three teaching rotations of the PBL curriculum and those of 43 corresponding tutorials in the non-PBL curriculum were counted. Twelve videotapes of tutorials (six from each curriculum), stratified for tutor, case scenario and students' learning stage, were randomly selected and transcribed. They were rated with the group-interaction (5 items) and active-participation (four items) tutorial assessment scales developed by Valle et al. These outcomes were compared between the students of PBL and non-PBL curricula. RESULTS: Students from the PBL curriculum talked significantly more. In only two (4.7%) of 43 tutorials in the non-PBL curriculum did the students talk more than the tutors; but students talked more than the tutors in 17 (37.0%) of 46 tutorials in the PBL curriculum. PBL students scored significantly higher than non-PBL students in all items except one item (respect to peers) of the tutorial assessment scales, and in the mean scores of both the group interaction scale (items 1-5) and the active participation scale (items 6-9). CONCLUSIONS: The results suggested that PBL starting from the early years of a medical curriculum was associated with more active student participation, interaction and collaboration in small-group tutorials. SN - 1466-187X UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/17917990/PBL_curriculum_improves_medical_students'_participation_in_small_group_tutorials_ L2 - https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/01421590701294349 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -