4.5 Article

Online Problem-Based Learning in Clinical Dental Education: Students' Self-Perception and Motivation

Journal

HEALTHCARE
Volume 9, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/healthcare9040420

Keywords

problem-based learning; dental education; e-learning; innovation in teaching; clinical teaching

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The study found that dental students in a clinical dental education context prefer using online problem-based learning over traditional learning strategies, as well as favoring a hybrid learning system and taking self-responsibility for their own learning. However, students generally perceive the depth of knowledge in online learning to be relatively low.
The physical closure of higher education institutions due to coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) shed a brighter light on the need to analyze, explore, and implement strategies that allow the development of clinical skills in a distance learning situation. This cross-sectional study aims to assess dental students' self-perception, motivation, organization, acquired clinical skills, and knowledge using the online problem-based learning method, through the application of a 41-item questionnaire to 118 senior students. Answers were subjected to descriptive and inferential statistics analysis. Further, a principal component analysis was performed, in order to examine the factor structure of the questionnaire. Results show that online problem-based learning can be considered a relevant learning tool when utilized within the specific context of clinical dental education, displaying benefits over the traditional learning strategy. Overall, dental students prefer a hybrid system over the conventional one, in a distance learning context, and assume self-responsibility for their own learning, while knowledge thoroughness is perceived as inferior. This online active learning method is successful in improving information and clinical ability (visual/spatial and auditory) advancement in the scope of dental education, with similar results to presential settings. Further studies are required to assess clinical skill development through active learning methods, in a distance learning context.

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