Internet skills of medical faculty and students: is there a difference?

Abstract Background The shift from a more didactic to student-centred pedagogical approach has led to the implementation of new information communication technology (ICT) innovations and curricula. Consequently, analysis of the digital competency of both faculty and students is of increasing importa...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Diane O’Doherty, Justan Lougheed, Ailish Hannigan, Jason Last, Marie Dromey, Colm O’Tuathaigh, Deirdre McGrath
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-01-01
Series:BMC Medical Education
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12909-019-1475-4
id doaj-404529518cae4b33ac21bbaaf2b9d896
record_format Article
spelling doaj-404529518cae4b33ac21bbaaf2b9d8962020-11-25T03:12:00ZengBMCBMC Medical Education1472-69202019-01-011911910.1186/s12909-019-1475-4Internet skills of medical faculty and students: is there a difference?Diane O’Doherty0Justan Lougheed1Ailish Hannigan2Jason Last3Marie Dromey4Colm O’Tuathaigh5Deirdre McGrath6Graduate Entry Medical School, University of LimerickGraduate Entry Medical School, University of LimerickGraduate Entry Medical School, University of LimerickSchool of Medicine, University College DublinSchool of Medicine, University College DublinSchool of Medicine, University College CorkGraduate Entry Medical School, University of LimerickAbstract Background The shift from a more didactic to student-centred pedagogical approach has led to the implementation of new information communication technology (ICT) innovations and curricula. Consequently, analysis of the digital competency of both faculty and students is of increasing importance. The aim of this research is to measure and compare the internet skills of medical school faculty and students and to investigate any potential skills gap between the two groups. Methods A survey of medical school faculty and students across three universities in Ireland was carried out using a validated instrument (Internet Skills Scale) measuring five internet skills (Operational, Information Navigation, Social, Creative and Mobile). Three focus groups comprising a total of fifteen students and four semi-structured interviews with faculty across three institutions were carried out to explore further findings and perceptions towards digital literacy, give further insight and add context to the findings. Results Seventy-eight medical faculty (response rate 45%) and 401 students (response rate 15%) responded to the survey. Mean scores for each internet skill were high (above 4 out of 5) for all skills apart from Creative (mean of 3.08 for students and 3.10 for faculty). There were no large differences between student and faculty scores across the five skills. Qualitative results supported survey findings with a deeper investigation into topics such as online professionalism, use of licencing and mobile application development. Needs based skills training and support were highlighted as areas for faculty development. Conclusion Both medical educators and students tend to have similar competencies with respect to internet skills. When implementing online and distance learning methodologies however, medical schools need to ensure appropriate skills training and support for faculty as well as providing targeted training to improve the creative skills of both their educators and students.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12909-019-1475-4DigitalInternet skillsMedical facultyMedical studentsMedical school
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Diane O’Doherty
Justan Lougheed
Ailish Hannigan
Jason Last
Marie Dromey
Colm O’Tuathaigh
Deirdre McGrath
spellingShingle Diane O’Doherty
Justan Lougheed
Ailish Hannigan
Jason Last
Marie Dromey
Colm O’Tuathaigh
Deirdre McGrath
Internet skills of medical faculty and students: is there a difference?
BMC Medical Education
Digital
Internet skills
Medical faculty
Medical students
Medical school
author_facet Diane O’Doherty
Justan Lougheed
Ailish Hannigan
Jason Last
Marie Dromey
Colm O’Tuathaigh
Deirdre McGrath
author_sort Diane O’Doherty
title Internet skills of medical faculty and students: is there a difference?
title_short Internet skills of medical faculty and students: is there a difference?
title_full Internet skills of medical faculty and students: is there a difference?
title_fullStr Internet skills of medical faculty and students: is there a difference?
title_full_unstemmed Internet skills of medical faculty and students: is there a difference?
title_sort internet skills of medical faculty and students: is there a difference?
publisher BMC
series BMC Medical Education
issn 1472-6920
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Abstract Background The shift from a more didactic to student-centred pedagogical approach has led to the implementation of new information communication technology (ICT) innovations and curricula. Consequently, analysis of the digital competency of both faculty and students is of increasing importance. The aim of this research is to measure and compare the internet skills of medical school faculty and students and to investigate any potential skills gap between the two groups. Methods A survey of medical school faculty and students across three universities in Ireland was carried out using a validated instrument (Internet Skills Scale) measuring five internet skills (Operational, Information Navigation, Social, Creative and Mobile). Three focus groups comprising a total of fifteen students and four semi-structured interviews with faculty across three institutions were carried out to explore further findings and perceptions towards digital literacy, give further insight and add context to the findings. Results Seventy-eight medical faculty (response rate 45%) and 401 students (response rate 15%) responded to the survey. Mean scores for each internet skill were high (above 4 out of 5) for all skills apart from Creative (mean of 3.08 for students and 3.10 for faculty). There were no large differences between student and faculty scores across the five skills. Qualitative results supported survey findings with a deeper investigation into topics such as online professionalism, use of licencing and mobile application development. Needs based skills training and support were highlighted as areas for faculty development. Conclusion Both medical educators and students tend to have similar competencies with respect to internet skills. When implementing online and distance learning methodologies however, medical schools need to ensure appropriate skills training and support for faculty as well as providing targeted training to improve the creative skills of both their educators and students.
topic Digital
Internet skills
Medical faculty
Medical students
Medical school
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12909-019-1475-4
work_keys_str_mv AT dianeodoherty internetskillsofmedicalfacultyandstudentsisthereadifference
AT justanlougheed internetskillsofmedicalfacultyandstudentsisthereadifference
AT ailishhannigan internetskillsofmedicalfacultyandstudentsisthereadifference
AT jasonlast internetskillsofmedicalfacultyandstudentsisthereadifference
AT mariedromey internetskillsofmedicalfacultyandstudentsisthereadifference
AT colmotuathaigh internetskillsofmedicalfacultyandstudentsisthereadifference
AT deirdremcgrath internetskillsofmedicalfacultyandstudentsisthereadifference
_version_ 1724651886261305344