Journal article
Journal of Surgical Education, 2021
APA
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Ichiuji, B. A., DeAngelis, E. J., Corpodean, F., Thompson, J., Arsenault, L., Amdur, R., … Jackson, H. (2021). The Effect of a Microlearning Module on Knowledge Acquisition in Surgery Clerkship Students. Journal of Surgical Education.
Chicago/Turabian
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Ichiuji, Brynne A., Erik J. DeAngelis, Florina Corpodean, Jamie Thompson, Lauren Arsenault, R. Amdur, K. Vaziri, Juliet Lee, and H. Jackson. “The Effect of a Microlearning Module on Knowledge Acquisition in Surgery Clerkship Students.” Journal of Surgical Education (2021).
MLA
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Ichiuji, Brynne A., et al. “The Effect of a Microlearning Module on Knowledge Acquisition in Surgery Clerkship Students.” Journal of Surgical Education, 2021.
BibTeX Click to copy
@article{brynne2021a,
title = {The Effect of a Microlearning Module on Knowledge Acquisition in Surgery Clerkship Students.},
year = {2021},
journal = {Journal of Surgical Education},
author = {Ichiuji, Brynne A. and DeAngelis, Erik J. and Corpodean, Florina and Thompson, Jamie and Arsenault, Lauren and Amdur, R. and Vaziri, K. and Lee, Juliet and Jackson, H.}
}
OBJECTIVE Microlearning has been found to be beneficial in other areas of healthcare education. The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of a microlearning module compared to a traditional online learning module in undergraduate medical education.
DESIGN A microlearning module was developed to cover the etiology and management of gallbladder disease. Surgery clerkship students were randomized into 2 groups. One group began with the microlearning module (MLM). The second group began with a 45 minute commercially available module centered on gallbladder disease (WISE-MD™). Halfway through the clerkship, the groups crossed over to the other learning intervention. Student knowledge was assessed with a test at three time points (pre-test, post-test1, post-test2).
SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS Third year surgery clerkship students at George Washington University.
RESULTS There were 56 students in the MLM and 57 in WISE-MDTM groups. In the MLM group, mean scores significantly increased from pre-test to post-test1 and pre-test to post-test2, but significantly decreased from post-test1 to post-test2. In the WISE-MD™ group, mean scores significantly increased from pre-test to post-test1 and pre-test to post-test2, with no significant change from post-test1 to post-test2. After the initial intervention, test scores of post-test1 of the MLM group were significantly higher than the WISE-MD™ group, while there were no significant differences between groups at the pre-test or post-test2 time points.
CONCLUSIONS Students exposed to the microlearning module first performed significantly better on a post intervention test than students that used a commercially available product in our standard curriculum. Therefore, the use of microlearning modules may lead to improved knowledge acquisition in surgery clerkship students.