Tags

Type your tag names separated by a space and hit enter

A prospective study of medical students' perspective of teaching-learning media: reiterating the importance of feedback.
J Indian Med Assoc. 2007 Nov; 105(11):621-3, 636.JI

Abstract

To enhance successful communication, medical teachers are increasingly using teaching-learning media. To determine medical students' perception of three such media (blackboard, overhead projector, and slides), and to generate recommendations for their optimal use, a prospective questionnaire-based study was carried out among 7th semester medical students of the University College of Medical Sciences and Guru Teg Bahadur Hospital, Delhi. Students made a forced choice between: (1) The three media on 8 questions regarding their advantages and disadvantages and (2) four aspects of a lecture (teaching-learning media, topic, teacher and time of day) regarding which made the lecture most engaging. Resulting data was analysed by Chi-square and Fisher's exact tests. Chalk and blackboard was rated as best in allowing interaction and helping recall (p<0.001 each). The overhead projector was best in providing information pointwise (p<0.001; 67 students, 89.3%, considered this an advantage). More subject matter could be covered per lecture (p=0.001; 58 students, 77.3%, considered this a disadvantage). Slides were best in imparting clinical details (p=0.004), but were sleep inducing (p<0.001). The teacher's style of instruction was most important in making the lecture engaging (p<0.001). The teacher's role in the learning process is important. Students enjoy the slow pace and interaction allowed by blackboard, pointwise information presented by the overhead projector, and the clinical details a slide can provide. The results suggest that the lecture could best be a combination of two or more teaching-learning media. Students' interaction should be encouraged whatever the media used.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Ophthalmology, University College of Medical Sciences, Guru Teg Bahadur Hospital, Delhi.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

18405087

Citation

Dhaliwal, Upreet. "A Prospective Study of Medical Students' Perspective of Teaching-learning Media: Reiterating the Importance of Feedback." Journal of the Indian Medical Association, vol. 105, no. 11, 2007, pp. 621-3, 636.
Dhaliwal U. A prospective study of medical students' perspective of teaching-learning media: reiterating the importance of feedback. J Indian Med Assoc. 2007;105(11):621-3, 636.
Dhaliwal, U. (2007). A prospective study of medical students' perspective of teaching-learning media: reiterating the importance of feedback. Journal of the Indian Medical Association, 105(11), 621-3, 636.
Dhaliwal U. A Prospective Study of Medical Students' Perspective of Teaching-learning Media: Reiterating the Importance of Feedback. J Indian Med Assoc. 2007;105(11):621-3, 636. PubMed PMID: 18405087.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - A prospective study of medical students' perspective of teaching-learning media: reiterating the importance of feedback. A1 - Dhaliwal,Upreet, PY - 2008/4/15/pubmed PY - 2008/5/15/medline PY - 2008/4/15/entrez SP - 621-3, 636 JF - Journal of the Indian Medical Association JO - J Indian Med Assoc VL - 105 IS - 11 N2 - To enhance successful communication, medical teachers are increasingly using teaching-learning media. To determine medical students' perception of three such media (blackboard, overhead projector, and slides), and to generate recommendations for their optimal use, a prospective questionnaire-based study was carried out among 7th semester medical students of the University College of Medical Sciences and Guru Teg Bahadur Hospital, Delhi. Students made a forced choice between: (1) The three media on 8 questions regarding their advantages and disadvantages and (2) four aspects of a lecture (teaching-learning media, topic, teacher and time of day) regarding which made the lecture most engaging. Resulting data was analysed by Chi-square and Fisher's exact tests. Chalk and blackboard was rated as best in allowing interaction and helping recall (p<0.001 each). The overhead projector was best in providing information pointwise (p<0.001; 67 students, 89.3%, considered this an advantage). More subject matter could be covered per lecture (p=0.001; 58 students, 77.3%, considered this a disadvantage). Slides were best in imparting clinical details (p=0.004), but were sleep inducing (p<0.001). The teacher's style of instruction was most important in making the lecture engaging (p<0.001). The teacher's role in the learning process is important. Students enjoy the slow pace and interaction allowed by blackboard, pointwise information presented by the overhead projector, and the clinical details a slide can provide. The results suggest that the lecture could best be a combination of two or more teaching-learning media. Students' interaction should be encouraged whatever the media used. SN - 0019-5847 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/18405087/A_prospective_study_of_medical_students'_perspective_of_teaching_learning_media:_reiterating_the_importance_of_feedback_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -