Drug development and the process of transitioning to team-based learning in a qualitative way

The North American Pharmacist Licensure Examination and the Pharmacy Curriculum Outcomes Assessment are two standardized tests that evaluate students' preparedness to progress into pharmacy practice. Pharmacy educators are responsible for ensuring individual learners are engaged in course mater...

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Veröffentlicht in:Currents in pharmacy teaching and learning 2021-06, Vol.13 (6), p.723-728
Hauptverfasser: Bertsch, Taylor G., Denton, Travis T., Perea, Nicole M., Ahmed, Ayesha, McKeirnan, Kimberly C.
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container_end_page 728
container_issue 6
container_start_page 723
container_title Currents in pharmacy teaching and learning
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creator Bertsch, Taylor G.
Denton, Travis T.
Perea, Nicole M.
Ahmed, Ayesha
McKeirnan, Kimberly C.
description The North American Pharmacist Licensure Examination and the Pharmacy Curriculum Outcomes Assessment are two standardized tests that evaluate students' preparedness to progress into pharmacy practice. Pharmacy educators are responsible for ensuring individual learners are engaged in course material and take appropriate steps to succeed in meeting learning outcomes. Whenever a new pedagogy is adopted in a previously existing course, understanding the impact on learners is critical. Team-based learning (TBL) was implemented within a novel Drug Discovery and Development course to measure the impact in active participation and student performance within the second year of pharmacy school. Survey data was collected to gather pharmacy students' perspectives regarding the pedagogy change. Examination competency scores and active participation were tracked to measure student engagement. Survey results revealed students agreed or strongly agreed that Drug Discovery and Development was enjoyable when taught with a TBL model, created a conductive learning environment, and improved their perceived knowledge, communication skills, and confidence. Average attendance scores were > 90% in a TBL setting. No change in block exam competency scores were noted across the three academic cohorts. Students agreed that Drug Discovery and Development was enjoyable when taught using TBL, created a conductive learning environment, and improved their perceived knowledge, communication skills, and confidence. Additional research should be conducted to quantify student engagement and active attendance within similar courses. Similar styles of TBL implementation could be incorporated at other colleges of pharmacy to measure its potential benefits.
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source ScienceDirect Journals (5 years ago - present)
subjects Attendance
Flipped-class
North American pharmacist licensure examination
Pharmacy curriculum outcomes assessment
Team-based learning
title Drug development and the process of transitioning to team-based learning in a qualitative way
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