Effect of Electronic Versus Print Format and Different Reading Resources on Knowledge Acquisition in the Third-Year Medicine Clerkship

2005 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 349-354 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kent J. DeZee ◽  
Steven Durning ◽  
G. Dodd Denton
2019 ◽  
Vol 13 (5) ◽  
pp. 516-538 ◽  
Author(s):  
Piia Mikkola ◽  
Esa Lehtinen

This study aims to uncover the processes of interaction through which knowledge acquisition in new employee orientation is monitored and controlled. Using video-recordings of orientation lectures as data, the study focuses on question–answer sequences in which the lecturer’s question probes into the state of the employees’ knowledge; in particular, it looks at the third turn of the sequence, in which the lecturer comes to a conclusion concerning the participants’ knowledge. This is shown to be an unavoidably practical accomplishment, which is contingent on both the often ambivalent responses of the participants and the design of the knowledge-probing question. Also, the lecturer orients to being responsible for providing the employees with the necessary knowledge that they do not have. The study contributes to discussion of the interactional organization of knowledge in institutional settings, and it sheds light on the pros and cons of lectures as interactional encounters.


Author(s):  
Peter Flynn

In an earlier paper [Flynn 2020] I described the implementation of an XML/XSLT system (now named ℞, pronounced ‘recipe’: see http://xml.silmaril.ie/recipes/recipe/) for checking and reproducing cookery recipes where the ingredients were stored as disaggregated data in attributes rather than as plain-text phrases in unmarked element CDATA content. Since then, work has proceeded on three key aspects: a) the refinement of the categories for recipe ingredients; b) the implementation of the formatting algorithm in XSLT; and c) the implementation in CSS. This paper describes the third of these, recreating in CSS (for XML) the grammar of expressing the disaggregated data which the XSLT (for HTML) algorithms use to create the lists of ingredients and references to them. The categorization task is out of scope for markup conferences, and is best discussed over a good dinner. In recipes written in English, the syntax of the List of Ingredients is a commonly-accepted format expressing quantity, units, item, and various modifiers. In the earlier paper I showed how XSLT can be used to manipulate the ingredient data to achieve the required format. I indicated that the original (pre-℞) site used XML as the print format with CSS, and that this raised challenges when the disaggregated data was in attributes. This problem has now largely been overcome, and I also give details of how to XSLT has been used to overcome some of the things CSS cannot do for the same tasks. Note: The names used for the attributes discussed here are still experimental and subject to change. In particular the item categorization is a work-in-progress, and should not be taken as a statement of intent.


2007 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 111
Author(s):  
Suzanne Lewis

Objective – To assess medical graduates’ use of evidence based medicine (EBM) in residency, self-perception of EBM skills, attitudes toward EBM, and the impact of a formal EBM curriculum in their third undergraduate year. Design – A longitudinal follow-up study by self-administered questionnaire. Setting – Internal medicine residency programs in US hospitals. Subjects – A convenience sample of 2001 and 2002 graduates of the University of Illinois College of Medicine at Peoria (UICOM-P) (n=78), and their respective residency program directors (n=72). Methods – A student graduate questionnaire (SGQ) was sent to all members of UICOM-P’s 2001 and 2002 graduating classes who had completed the EBM course during their M-3 Internal Medicine clerkship. A program director questionnaire (PDQ), similar to the SGQ, was sent to the graduates’ residency program directors. The research instrument was tested with a pilot group prior to use, but not validated. The questionnaires consisted of 4 main sections. The first section examined formal and informal EBM programs in the graduates’ residency curriculum. The second section consisted of a self-assessment of EBM skills by the residents and an assessment of those skills by their program directors. The third section asked graduates to compare their EBM skills to those of their fellow residents who had not been students at UICOM-P. Similarly, in the third section of the PDQ, program directors were asked to compare the EBM skills of UICOM-P graduates and non-UICOM-P graduates participating in the residency program. The last section concerned professional and demographic characteristics. Copies of the surveys were mailed out to non-responders after 6 weeks. Results were collated but statistical analysis was not applied. Main results – The response rate was 32% for residents and 35% for program directors. The number of incomplete surveys was not reported. Forty-four percent of all respondents reported having a formal EBM curriculum for residents, and 76% reported an informal curriculum. For both formal and informal programs, the most common teaching formats were journal clubs, followed by lectures, teaching rounds, morning reports, bedside consultations, ambulatory clinics and seminars. In section two of the questionnaires, both residents and program directors rated the residents’ EBM skills similarly. However, the residents rated their skills in searching the literature and application of findings to clinical practice higher than the program directors. Program directors also rated the residents’ skills in understanding statistics and tests higher than the residents themselves. Twenty-four percent of both residents and program directors rated the UICOM-P graduates as “very competent” or “extremely competent” in EBM skills (50). Only 35% of program directors and 27% of residents rated the UICOM-P graduates’ EBM skills as “usually better” or “always better” than their peers who were not UICOM-P graduates (50). Conclusion - The authors of this study conclude that, for UICOM-P graduates, “it might be implied from these results that the EBM skills gained during medical school were retained through their medical school graduation and into their residency training” (51). However, this study has methodological weaknesses which make it difficult to draw any definite conclusions from the results.


2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 19-32
Author(s):  
Emil Sætra ◽  
Janicke Heldal Stray

In this article, we explore teachers’ ideas about teaching for democratic citizenship. In short, we want to understand “what kind of citizen” teachers aim to educate. We ground our study in three ideal types that represent different ways of understanding what education for democratic citizenship education revolves around: politically informed citizenship (politisk informert medborgerskap), rational autonomous citizenship (rasjonelt autonomt medborgerskap), and socially intelligent citizenship (sosialt intelligent medborgerskap). A first finding is that teacher emphasize that students should acquire knowledge that they can make use of as democratic citizens. Teachers are preoccupied with making students politically informed. A second finding is, however, that teachers understand democratic citizenship education as something more than just knowledge acquisition. One purpose that holds high priority with the teachers is that students should learn how to think critically; to become rationally autonomous. The pedagogical implication of this view is that students should acquire knowledge, skills, and attitudes that helps realize this ambition. This interpretation of what democratic citizenship is moves beyond being able to make an informed choice between different alternatives or representatives. In the last part of the article education for democratic citizenship is discussed in light of the third category; the socially intelligent citizen. We find that while teachers put much emphasis on knowledge and critical thinking, there is little emphasis on participation in democratic practices. We thus conclude that teachers talk about schooling as a tool for democracy much more than they talk about democracy as an ideal or model for schooling.  


1996 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
pp. 11-35
Author(s):  
Laudy E.H.M. ter Haar ◽  
Ivana Kruijff-Korbayová ◽  
Paul E. van der Vet ◽  
Toine Andernach

Abstract. The research reported here has been conducted in the context of the Plinius project, which aims at semi-automatic knowledge acquisition from short natural-language texts. In this framework, a system has been developed for finding the antecedents of pronominal anaphora, in particular 'it'- and 'its'- anaphora. The anaphora resolution module operates on parser output and can make use of information generated by the parser; the lexicon gives the conceptual representations corresponding to the words. The algorithm for anaphora resolution involves three steps: (i) Assemble: construct a list of discourse entities (DEs); (ii) Identify: identify anaphoric DEs; (iii) Select: select, for each anaphoric DE, another DE from the list of DEs as its antecedent. The third step applies four constraints, i.e. rules to which a DE must conform in order to be a valid candidate: (a) semantic type agreement; (b) number agreement; (c) projection constraint; (d) conceptual compatibility. Constraints (a, b, c) are linguistic, while (d) is domain-related. The algorithm has been tested on three texts. It turns out that applying (d) before (a, b, c) considerably improves efficiency.


MedEdPORTAL ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Donna Elliott ◽  
Pamela Schaff ◽  
Theresa Woehrle ◽  
Anne Walsh ◽  
Janet Trial

2020 ◽  
Vol 49 (2) ◽  
pp. 199-218
Author(s):  
Qing Li ◽  
Richard Tay ◽  
Arkhadi Pustaka

The main purpose of this research is to examine the effect of game-based learning on knowledge acquisition and retention of road rules. A secondary purpose of this study is to investigate possible gender differences related to such an approach. The third purpose is to explore the relationship between beliefs and knowledge acquisition. This quasi-experimental study employed pretest–posttests design involving 42 participants, randomly selected from people in Alberta, Canada. The participants took a pretest, played a game specifically designed to help players learn road rules, and then two posttests. The results show that gaming not only can improve players’ knowledge of road rules and road safety but also can help players retain such knowledge. However, no gender difference was identified in knowledge gain after the gaming intervention.


MedEdPORTAL ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 11032
Author(s):  
Daniel Gergen ◽  
Joshua Raines ◽  
Bryan Lublin ◽  
Anna Neumeier ◽  
Bill Quach ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document