Teaching Medical and Health Sciences students to develop e-posters with Learning Toolbox

Introduction: In the 21st Century, medical personnel require electronic and written communication skills in order to communicate with colleagues and patients. These specific skills are seldom taught, as communication skills' teaching and assessment currently emphasises face-to-face, verbal com...

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Main Authors: Ken Masters, Tamsin Treasure-Jones, Raymond Elferink
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Association for Medical Education in Europe (AMEE) 2018-04-01
Series:MedEdPublish
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mededpublish.org/Manuscripts/1528
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spelling doaj-aaf6607dc92f4ae88c4114bfcbf1687e2020-11-25T02:22:11ZengAssociation for Medical Education in Europe (AMEE)MedEdPublish2312-79962018-04-0172Teaching Medical and Health Sciences students to develop e-posters with Learning ToolboxKen Masters0Tamsin Treasure-Jones1Raymond Elferink2Sultan Qaboos UniversityUniversity of Leedsstack.servicesIntroduction: In the 21st Century, medical personnel require electronic and written communication skills in order to communicate with colleagues and patients. These specific skills are seldom taught, as communication skills' teaching and assessment currently emphasises face-to-face, verbal communications. This study aims at teaching some skills required for electronic communication, and evaluating the process. Methodology: We used a specific platform to teach 188 medical and health sciences students, working in groups, to develop e-posters that run as mobile apps, and evaluated the process in terms of resource demands, students' experience (through an online survey), and e-poster quality. Results: From 188 students, a total of 144 students submitted 30 accessible e-posters, and 71 students participated in the survey. The resource demand was equivalent to resource demand for teaching paper poster design and creation. Despite technical problems not related to the platform, the students were able to produce acceptable quality e-posters with reasonable effort. Discussion and Conclusion: This study indicates that it is possible to teach medical and health sciences students the basics of e-poster design, and extend their communication abilities into the realm of electronic communication. This bodes well to prepare them to take their place as e-poster creators in a broad range of spheres, especially for academic conferences and patient communication. https://www.mededpublish.org/Manuscripts/1528communication skillsmHealthe-postersmlearningLearning Toolbox
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ken Masters
Tamsin Treasure-Jones
Raymond Elferink
spellingShingle Ken Masters
Tamsin Treasure-Jones
Raymond Elferink
Teaching Medical and Health Sciences students to develop e-posters with Learning Toolbox
MedEdPublish
communication skills
mHealth
e-posters
mlearning
Learning Toolbox
author_facet Ken Masters
Tamsin Treasure-Jones
Raymond Elferink
author_sort Ken Masters
title Teaching Medical and Health Sciences students to develop e-posters with Learning Toolbox
title_short Teaching Medical and Health Sciences students to develop e-posters with Learning Toolbox
title_full Teaching Medical and Health Sciences students to develop e-posters with Learning Toolbox
title_fullStr Teaching Medical and Health Sciences students to develop e-posters with Learning Toolbox
title_full_unstemmed Teaching Medical and Health Sciences students to develop e-posters with Learning Toolbox
title_sort teaching medical and health sciences students to develop e-posters with learning toolbox
publisher Association for Medical Education in Europe (AMEE)
series MedEdPublish
issn 2312-7996
publishDate 2018-04-01
description Introduction: In the 21st Century, medical personnel require electronic and written communication skills in order to communicate with colleagues and patients. These specific skills are seldom taught, as communication skills' teaching and assessment currently emphasises face-to-face, verbal communications. This study aims at teaching some skills required for electronic communication, and evaluating the process. Methodology: We used a specific platform to teach 188 medical and health sciences students, working in groups, to develop e-posters that run as mobile apps, and evaluated the process in terms of resource demands, students' experience (through an online survey), and e-poster quality. Results: From 188 students, a total of 144 students submitted 30 accessible e-posters, and 71 students participated in the survey. The resource demand was equivalent to resource demand for teaching paper poster design and creation. Despite technical problems not related to the platform, the students were able to produce acceptable quality e-posters with reasonable effort. Discussion and Conclusion: This study indicates that it is possible to teach medical and health sciences students the basics of e-poster design, and extend their communication abilities into the realm of electronic communication. This bodes well to prepare them to take their place as e-poster creators in a broad range of spheres, especially for academic conferences and patient communication.
topic communication skills
mHealth
e-posters
mlearning
Learning Toolbox
url https://www.mededpublish.org/Manuscripts/1528
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