Application of Active Learning Strategies for Online Delivery in an Occupational Therapy Assistant Program

The COVID-19 pandemic had a significant impact worldwide in every aspect of society including occupational therapy assistant students enrolled in academic coursework. This manuscript examines the unique experience of occupational therapy assistant faculty in a northeast state who were able to quickl...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tiffany L. Benaroya, Jennifer C. George, Deborah McKernan-Ace, Margaret Swarbrick
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Eastern Kentucky University 2021-04-01
Series:Journal of Occupational Therapy Education
Subjects:
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spelling doaj-76233ee4b78e4a3ba76458b180e0b2d12021-07-02T14:25:09ZengEastern Kentucky UniversityJournal of Occupational Therapy Education2573-13782021-04-015210.26681/jote.2021.050210Application of Active Learning Strategies for Online Delivery in an Occupational Therapy Assistant ProgramTiffany L. Benaroya0Jennifer C. George1Deborah McKernan-Ace2Margaret Swarbrick3Rutgers University - School of Health ProfessionsRutgers University - School of Health ProfessionsRutgers University - School of Health ProfessionsRutgers University Center of Alcohol and Substance Use Studies, Graduate School of Applied and Professional PsychologyThe COVID-19 pandemic had a significant impact worldwide in every aspect of society including occupational therapy assistant students enrolled in academic coursework. This manuscript examines the unique experience of occupational therapy assistant faculty in a northeast state who were able to quickly modify classroom and lab teaching-learning strategies to a fully online virtual format for two semesters. Since no available information on strategies for online delivery of occupational therapy assistant education were found in the literature, their experiences implementing active learning strategies are described and discussed. Strategies covered include: the flipped classroom model; think-pair-share and jigsaw technique using breakout rooms; polling and student response systems; muddiest point via chat box; lab kits; one-minute paper using discussion forums; and student-generated videos. Twenty students provided feedback through a survey about the helpfulness of each strategy. The breakout room and chat box feature of the synchronous virtual classroom as well as lab kits were perceived as most helpful, whereas student-generated videos and one-minute papers were perceived as least helpful. Implications for continued incorporation of online learning in occupational therapy assistant curricula are outlined.occupational therapy assistantactive learning strategiesonline learning
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tiffany L. Benaroya
Jennifer C. George
Deborah McKernan-Ace
Margaret Swarbrick
spellingShingle Tiffany L. Benaroya
Jennifer C. George
Deborah McKernan-Ace
Margaret Swarbrick
Application of Active Learning Strategies for Online Delivery in an Occupational Therapy Assistant Program
Journal of Occupational Therapy Education
occupational therapy assistant
active learning strategies
online learning
author_facet Tiffany L. Benaroya
Jennifer C. George
Deborah McKernan-Ace
Margaret Swarbrick
author_sort Tiffany L. Benaroya
title Application of Active Learning Strategies for Online Delivery in an Occupational Therapy Assistant Program
title_short Application of Active Learning Strategies for Online Delivery in an Occupational Therapy Assistant Program
title_full Application of Active Learning Strategies for Online Delivery in an Occupational Therapy Assistant Program
title_fullStr Application of Active Learning Strategies for Online Delivery in an Occupational Therapy Assistant Program
title_full_unstemmed Application of Active Learning Strategies for Online Delivery in an Occupational Therapy Assistant Program
title_sort application of active learning strategies for online delivery in an occupational therapy assistant program
publisher Eastern Kentucky University
series Journal of Occupational Therapy Education
issn 2573-1378
publishDate 2021-04-01
description The COVID-19 pandemic had a significant impact worldwide in every aspect of society including occupational therapy assistant students enrolled in academic coursework. This manuscript examines the unique experience of occupational therapy assistant faculty in a northeast state who were able to quickly modify classroom and lab teaching-learning strategies to a fully online virtual format for two semesters. Since no available information on strategies for online delivery of occupational therapy assistant education were found in the literature, their experiences implementing active learning strategies are described and discussed. Strategies covered include: the flipped classroom model; think-pair-share and jigsaw technique using breakout rooms; polling and student response systems; muddiest point via chat box; lab kits; one-minute paper using discussion forums; and student-generated videos. Twenty students provided feedback through a survey about the helpfulness of each strategy. The breakout room and chat box feature of the synchronous virtual classroom as well as lab kits were perceived as most helpful, whereas student-generated videos and one-minute papers were perceived as least helpful. Implications for continued incorporation of online learning in occupational therapy assistant curricula are outlined.
topic occupational therapy assistant
active learning strategies
online learning
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