Monday, May 28, 2012

Learning from Cases Online

Medical cases can be very effective teaching tools.  Sometimes, though, it’s hard to know exactly what to include in a teaching case, especially when it’s presented online.  

For a good resource on developing cases, you can look through a recent paper in Teaching and Learning Medicine (1). 

The authors looked at online case-based presentations and scored each one on a series of features that make for a “good” case:
  • Relevance
  • Engagement
  • Challenge
  • Instructional strategies

Only a few of the online cases they reviewed scored well on their metric, which shows that many online cases aren't as good as they could be.  

This framework/checklist is a good way to look at cases and it’s worthwhile looking at the examples they present.  

The paper is worth taking a look at if you’re in the process of trying to develop case-based learning materials, or you want to review existing cases.



1. Kim, S., Phillips, W.R., Huntington, J., Astion, M.L., Keerbs, A., Pinskey, L., Dresden, G., Sharma, U., and D.W. Shearer (2007). Medical case teaching on the web.  Teaching and Learning in Medicine, 19(2), 106-114.  


http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/10401330701332169

Sunday, May 6, 2012

Online Learning Works Teaching a Complex Subject using PBL

Distance Learning is as Effective as Classroom Learning

In general, many studies have shown that online learning is as effective as classroom learning  The most common finding when comparing classroom to online learning is that they’re essentially equivalent if they’ve been carefully designed.  This has been shown to be true for many different kinds of learning experiences, but what about a highly interactive kinds of learning?  

A New Study Compares Online to Classroom Learning of Statistics

Does online learning work for learning statistical methods using a highly interactive methods like problem-based learning (PBL)?  That’s the question asked in a new paper published in Advances in health Sciences Education. (1)

The learners were enrolled in a Master’s degree program in public health and were learning multilevel and exploratory factor analysis.  

The classroom version of the course consisted of lectures, guided practice using statistical software, and PBL tutorials.  

Online learning used video lectures, individual practice with statistical software, and asynchronous PBL using discussion boards.  

Students’ experiences (positive or negative) were elicited after the course and their scores on the class final exam were compared.  

Measures indicated no significant differences between the two groups on examination scores.   


Some Advantages to Asynchronous PBL Discussions

Tutors and students noted some advantages of the asynchronous PBL discussions.  Tutors found that the online PBL took a little more time, to write feedback rather than delivering immediate verbal feedback.

Tutors like having the ability to monitor what students were doing and who was contributing the most to each discussion.  

Overall, the results of the study are consistent with many other studies showing that online learning can be as effective as classroom-based learning, even for a highly complex subject. 




de Jong, N., Versteen, D.M.L., Tan, F.E.S., and O'Connor, S.J., 2012, A comparison of classroom and online asynchronous problem-based learning for students undertaking statistics training as part of a Public Health masters degree. Advances in health Sciences Education (epublication).  

Sunday, March 25, 2012

Practice is Important for Learning - How we Practice may Also Be Important

EKG
I miss your heartbeat.  Uploaded to Flickr by digitalnoise
Wired.com recently ran an article called “Everything You Thought You Knew About Learning is Wrong.”  The article was popular and was re-posted by many different people interested in learning and education.  The article focused on an interview with Robert Bjork, a UCLA psychology professor and the Director of the UCLA Learning and Forgetting Lab.  

One of Bjork’s main themes was the importance of “interleaving,”  that is working on several skills at once rather than focusing on a single skill.  

“First, he told me, think about how you attack a pile of study material.
“People tend to try to learn in blocks,” Bjork said. “Mastering one thing before moving on to the next.”

Instead of doing that Bjork recommends interleaving. The strategy suggest that instead of spending an hour working on your tennis serve, you mix in a range of skills like backhands, volleys, overhead smashes, and footwork.

“This creates a sense of difficulty,” Bjork said. “And people tend not to notice the immediate effects of learning.”

Instead of making an appreciable leap forward with your serving ability after a session of focused practice, interleaving forces you to make nearly imperceptible steps forward with many skills. But over time, the sum of these small steps is much greater than the sum of the leaps you would have taken if you’d spent the same amount of time mastering each skill in its turn.”


Numerous studies support the positive effects of practicing different skills, rather than simply practicing a single skills then moving on.  


Interleaving (mixed) practice also works for learning in medicine
A paper in Advances in Health Sciences Education looked at the effect of mixed practice (interleaving) in learning to electrocardiogram (ECG) diagnosis.  


To diagnose an ECG, students have to be able to correctly identify the the features on the ECG and to know the rules for each cardiac diagnosis (for instance left ventricular hypertrophy).  

Traditionally, students have learned and practiced these diagnoses one at a time.  Once they had mastered a diagnosis, they moved on to a new one, with a new learning and practice cycle.  


Study Design - groups differ in timing of practice
The study used a 2 hour learning session for both groups.  Each of the groups got the same instruction on five different ECG diagnoses, but they differed in the timing and presentation of the practice materials.  
 

Control GroupContrastive Practice
Topic 1
Instruction
Practice
Topic 2
Instruction
Practice
Topic 3
Instruction
Practice
Topic 4
Instruction
Practice
Topic 5
Instruction
Practice
Topic 1
Instruction
Topic 2
Instruction
Topic 3
Instruction
Topic 4
Instruction
Topic 5
Instruction

Topics 1-5
Mixed Practice  Students encouraged to compare and contrast patterns  across diagnoses.    



Study outcomes - mixed practice works
Students were tested on a six-item diagnostic test.  The group receiving contrastive practice had an over 50% increase in accurate diagnoses (1.8 for the control group v. 2.8 for the contrastive practice group).



Hatala, R.M., Brooks, L.R., and Norman, G.R. (2003).  Practice makes perfect: The critical role of mixed practice in the acquisition of ECG interpretation skills.  Advances in Health Science Education, 8:17, 17-26.  


Sunday, February 12, 2012

Picture downloaded from Flickr (Christina Care)
Simulation training is widely used for surgical training and it seems to be very well suited for learning these kinds of procedural skills.  In a new paper in the Annals of Surgery (Zendejas, B, Cook DA, Bingener, J, Huebner, M, Dunn, WF, Sarr, MG, and Farley, DR. Simulation-based mastery learning improves patient outcomes in laparoscopic hernia repair,  Annals of Surgery, 254(3) 502-510). 

Their training resulted in improved patient outcomes including complications and the need for an overnight stay.  The control group  got "standard practice," which consisted of their regular clinical training. 

The training treatment group got additional training consisting of nine online learning modules and skills training on a simulator.  Each of these two components was built on a mastery learning model.  Students moved on from the online modules once they achieved 90% or better on multiple-choice knowledge test.

Skills training consisted of practice sessions, supervised by an expert, on a simulation task trainer.  Participants practiced until they were able to repair two simulated hernias in less than 2 minutes, on 2 consecutive attempts.  If they couldn't do this in 10 tries, or if they had worked for an hour, they stopped for the say and continued on a later day. 

This study shows us once again that sills practice can be an important part of successful training interventions.