4.6 Article

Introducing E-learning in Epidemiology Course for Undergraduate Medical Students at the Faculty of Medicine, University of Belgrade: A Pilot Study

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEDICAL SYSTEMS
Volume 39, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10916-015-0302-7

Keywords

E-learning; Epidemiology; Medical students; Seminars; Undergraduate

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development of the Republic of Serbia [175042, 175046, 175087]

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The aim of this study was to determine whether e-learning as a new teaching concept was acceptable for second-year undergraduates and to compare attitudes and exam results of students who followed electronic compared with classroom seminars. The electronic seminars (e-seminars) were developed several months prior to start of the epidemiology course for second-year students at the Faculty of Medicine, University of Belgrade. The students who applied for e-seminars accessed their content during summer semester (February-May) 2014. E-seminars were set according to the existing topics in practical workbook and designed using Moodle, a free, open-source, personal home page web application for producing modular internet-based courses. To evaluate the motives for enrollment and satisfaction with seminars, two surveys (pre- and post-course) were administered. Students' exam grades were registered over 4 exam sessions (June-October 2014) and compared according to seminar program. Out of 516 students in the second year, 60 (11.6 %) applied for e-seminars (mean age 21 years). Students considered the reason It's easier to do assignments from home as the strongest motive to participate. When compared to classroom seminars, students in e-seminars had significantly more fun (p=0.003), thought that e-seminars were better mode to learn epidemiology (p=0.030) and would recommend them to other colleagues (p=0.001). There was no significant difference in average grade received at the oral exam in epidemiology (t=0.071, p=0.944). E-seminars in undergraduate epidemiology course add a novel, easy-to-follow and amusing mode of learning. Based on this pilot study, e-seminars in epidemiology will be available for next generations of students, while further improvement of e-seminars could include expansion of seminar syllabus and development of discussion fora.

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