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Virtual interactive practice™: A strategy to enhance learning and competence in health care students

Virtual interactive practice™: A strategy to enhance learning and competence in health care students
Virtual interactive practice™: A strategy to enhance learning and competence in health care students
This paper reports the processes and initial outcomes of a pilot study which investigated a week long ‘virtual’ children’s ward experience for nursing students. Providing sufficient and meaningful experiences which enable students to quickly and effectively achieve competence in diverse areas of practice is often frustrated by the realities of available clinical experiences. Our response to this challenge was to more fully exploit and evaluate technologies which can be used to provide these learning experiences. Students experienced ‘real time’ scenario based work involving SIM-MAN; interactive information technology scenarios, critical incidents, master classes, video conferencing, and observational skill development exercises. Evaluation methodologies included observation of student performance, competence self rating scales; analysis of videotaped performance episodes and other data generated through the learning activities and lived experience accounts of participants. Initial findings indicate(1) statistically significant improvements in student competence measured through self reports; and (2) evidence of improvement gleaned from observed accounts, video analysis and qualitative evaluative comments. The final outcomes, including work with a control group, will be available for Conference.
user-computer interface, knowledge, attitudes, practice, clinical competence, health informatics, education and training
1586034448
874-878
American Medical Informatics Association
Gobbi, M.
c20db78a-f646-43af-96ce-ba874e610037
Monger, E.
384996be-3798-43cd-aeb9-66948573024f
Watkinson, G.
ed2937d4-9dbc-4f69-9f1e-7f87c683b097
Spencer, A.
30269483-5f36-45d1-94d4-150588bdbb3c
Weaver, M.
90f6f67e-e0ba-4907-9f0e-e6720c856f01
Lathlean, J.
67cd27e7-7ff2-4a98-832b-f339f4b0aee8
Bryant, S.
3db15afc-b0d9-4341-87e5-6e4a202e0aa9
Fieschi, M.
Coiera, F.
Li, J.
Gobbi, M.
c20db78a-f646-43af-96ce-ba874e610037
Monger, E.
384996be-3798-43cd-aeb9-66948573024f
Watkinson, G.
ed2937d4-9dbc-4f69-9f1e-7f87c683b097
Spencer, A.
30269483-5f36-45d1-94d4-150588bdbb3c
Weaver, M.
90f6f67e-e0ba-4907-9f0e-e6720c856f01
Lathlean, J.
67cd27e7-7ff2-4a98-832b-f339f4b0aee8
Bryant, S.
3db15afc-b0d9-4341-87e5-6e4a202e0aa9
Fieschi, M.
Coiera, F.
Li, J.

Gobbi, M., Monger, E., Watkinson, G., Spencer, A., Weaver, M., Lathlean, J. and Bryant, S. (2004) Virtual interactive practice™: A strategy to enhance learning and competence in health care students. Fieschi, M., Coiera, F. and Li, J. (eds.) In MEDINFO 2004: Proceedings of the 11th World Congress on Medical Informatics. American Medical Informatics Association. pp. 874-878 .

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)

Abstract

This paper reports the processes and initial outcomes of a pilot study which investigated a week long ‘virtual’ children’s ward experience for nursing students. Providing sufficient and meaningful experiences which enable students to quickly and effectively achieve competence in diverse areas of practice is often frustrated by the realities of available clinical experiences. Our response to this challenge was to more fully exploit and evaluate technologies which can be used to provide these learning experiences. Students experienced ‘real time’ scenario based work involving SIM-MAN; interactive information technology scenarios, critical incidents, master classes, video conferencing, and observational skill development exercises. Evaluation methodologies included observation of student performance, competence self rating scales; analysis of videotaped performance episodes and other data generated through the learning activities and lived experience accounts of participants. Initial findings indicate(1) statistically significant improvements in student competence measured through self reports; and (2) evidence of improvement gleaned from observed accounts, video analysis and qualitative evaluative comments. The final outcomes, including work with a control group, will be available for Conference.

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Gobbi,_M.,_et_al_-_MEDINFO_2004.pdf - Other
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More information

Published date: 2004
Venue - Dates: 11th World Congress on Medical Informatics, San Francisco, California, USA, 2004-09-07 - 2004-09-11
Keywords: user-computer interface, knowledge, attitudes, practice, clinical competence, health informatics, education and training

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 17334
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/17334
ISBN: 1586034448
PURE UUID: 8514d977-4c78-4ff2-8a4d-c04573ef3f60

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 06 Sep 2005
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 05:58

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Contributors

Author: M. Gobbi
Author: E. Monger
Author: G. Watkinson
Author: A. Spencer
Author: M. Weaver
Author: J. Lathlean
Author: S. Bryant
Editor: M. Fieschi
Editor: F. Coiera
Editor: J. Li

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