A virtual simulation‐based clinical skills course
Background Advancements in technology continue to transform the landscape of medical education. Virtual reality (VR) and remote simulation represent unique approaches to teaching students clinical skills through experiential learning. Approach We developed, implemented and evaluated a virtual simula...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The clinical teacher 2024-08, Vol.21 (4), p.e13727-n/a |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background
Advancements in technology continue to transform the landscape of medical education. Virtual reality (VR) and remote simulation represent unique approaches to teaching students clinical skills through experiential learning.
Approach
We developed, implemented and evaluated a virtual simulation‐based course modelled on Kolb's Learning Cycle. A 5‐day, 15‐h virtual clerkship clinical skills curriculum designed to help students recognise a patient requiring urgent or emergent care was piloted in May 2020. VR and remote simulations facilitated concrete experiences, reflective observation, concept formation, and active experimentation. Curricular evaluation included analysis of usage, performance, self‐assessment, and perceptions of educational value.
Evaluation
One hundred and fifty‐six students completed 436 VR sessions (median 3 per student). Students repeated virtual cases, on average, 75% of the time, demonstrating improvement in average performance scores from 59% (attempt 1) to 72% (attempt 2). Post‐course evaluations, completed by 109 (69.9%) students, demonstrated significant improvements in mean scores in all domains of a self‐assessment based on emergent care skills.
Implications
We developed and implemented a virtual clinical skills course that allowed students to progress through all four stages of Kolb's Learning Cycle. VR and remote simulations represent an opportunity for educators to reimagine and expand opportunities for experiential learning. The number of students accommodated, total virtual simulations completed, and positive student feedback suggests that this may be a feasible, acceptable, and scalable method for increasing opportunities for progression through Kolb's Learning Cycle. Further investigation into impact on educational outcomes is needed. |
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ISSN: | 1743-4971 1743-498X 1743-498X |
DOI: | 10.1111/tct.13727 |