학술논문

Medical, Dental, and Nursing Students' Experience with Virtual Practical Sessions: A Cross-Sectional Study in a Developing Country
ORIGINAL RESEARCH
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Advances in Medical Education and Practice. September 30, 2023, Vol. 14, p1045, 10 p.
Subject
Nursing education
Teaching methods
Epidemics
Medical students
Nursing
Online education
Nursing students
Developing countries
COVID-19
Education -- Methods
Language
English
ISSN
1179-7258
Abstract
Introduction Significant disease outbreaks related to severe acute respiratory syndrome coronaviruses (SARS) have been reported in the Middle East and East Asia over the last two decades. Coronavirus disease 2019 [...]
Background: The COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted the scope of healthcare education and shifted the teaching methods from oncampus to virtual. The impact of such a shift has rarely been investigated, and limited evidence exists about students' experience in terms of effort made and time spent, especially for laboratory sessions. Assessing students' experiences will provide paramount evidence to fine-tune laboratory virtual learning sessions. Objective: To assess students' experience of virtual (online) laboratory sessions versus on-campus laboratory sessions, including preference, time spent, the effort made, ability to remember instructions, and preference for future teaching. Methods: A cross-sectional study was utilized. A Google Forms questionnaire was prepared and sent to medicine, dentistry, and nursing school students registered at Jordan University of Science and Technology (JUST) during the 2019/2020 academic year. Selfreported preference, time spent, efforts made, ability to remember instructions and preference for future teaching were assessed for virtual versus on-campus anatomy, pathology, microbiology, histology, and physiology laboratory sessions. Results: A total of 455 students participated in this questionnaire. More students in histology (55.2%), pathology (57.4%), and microbiology (55.3%) laboratories, but not anatomy (39.6%) physiology (443.95), reported preferring virtual sessions over on-campus sessions. More students from histology (35.6%) and microbiology (37.0%) reported spending less effort than on-campus sessions. More than half of the participants agreed that virtual laboratory sessions consumed less time than on-campus sessions. Participants reported that they cannot remember the instruction given during virtual teaching compared to on-campus teaching. Differences in students' experiences were detected by gender, major, and year of study. Conclusion: The COVID-19 pandemic has the potential to change the future of healthcare education, and preparation for future crises is paramount. Effort made, time spent, ability to remember, and preference for virtual education should be considered in terms of gender, major of study, and year. These differences should also be reflected in the planning of virtual sessions for effective implementation. Keywords: medical students, COVID-19, laboratory sessions, virtual environment, on-campus sessions, Jordan