Acquisition of Procedural Skills in Preregistration Physiotherapy Education Comparing Mental Practice Against No Mental Practice: The Learning of Procedures in Physiotherapy Education Trial – A Development of Concept Study
Introduction: Procedural skills are a central element in the education of physiotherapists. Procedural skills relate to the execution of a practical task. An educational intervention, which can be used to support skill acquisition of procedural skills, is mental practice (MP). Several studies have i...
Main Authors: | , , , |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
SAGE Publishing
2020-06-01
|
Series: | Journal of Medical Education and Curricular Development |
Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1177/2382120520927382 |
id |
doaj-e3efb759c224481ea30f45e6129cd780 |
---|---|
record_format |
Article |
spelling |
doaj-e3efb759c224481ea30f45e6129cd7802020-11-25T03:19:16ZengSAGE PublishingJournal of Medical Education and Curricular Development2382-12052020-06-01710.1177/2382120520927382Acquisition of Procedural Skills in Preregistration Physiotherapy Education Comparing Mental Practice Against No Mental Practice: The Learning of Procedures in Physiotherapy Education Trial – A Development of Concept StudyKarl Martin Sattelmayer0Kavi C. Jagadamma1Roger Hilfiker2Gillian Baer3School of Health Sciences, University of Applied Sciences and Arts Western Switzerland Valais (HES-SO Valais-Wallis), Leukerbad, SwitzerlandPhysiotherapy, School of Health Sciences, Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh, UKSchool of Health Sciences, University of Applied Sciences and Arts Western Switzerland Valais (HES-SO Valais-Wallis), Leukerbad, SwitzerlandPhysiotherapy, School of Health Sciences, Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh, UKIntroduction: Procedural skills are a central element in the education of physiotherapists. Procedural skills relate to the execution of a practical task. An educational intervention, which can be used to support skill acquisition of procedural skills, is mental practice (MP). Several studies have investigated the use of MP or imaging in medical education. This pilot study evaluated the application of MP on the acquisition of procedural skills in physiotherapy education. Methods: This pilot randomised controlled study recruited a convenience sample of 37 BSc physiotherapy student participants. Two different complex task procedures (transfer and vestibular rehabilitation) were trained during this study. Participants in both the transfer (task procedure 1) and the vestibular rehabilitation (task procedure 2) arm of the study were randomly assigned to either MP or no MP. Results: For the transfer task, median performance at post-acquisition testing showed a moderate effect size in favour of the group using MP ( r : −0.3), but the findings were not statistically significant ( P : 0.2). Similar results were found for the vestibular rehabilitation task ( r : 0.29; P : 0.21). In addition, the self-reported confidence was higher in the MP group. Conclusion: Moderate effect sizes were identified in favour of MP at post-acquisition testing. In addition, the between-group difference was higher than the minimally important difference. The feasibility of the study was high based on quantitative feasibility measures such as the recruitment rate. Both these findings suggest larger well-powered studies should be considered to confirm the findings of this pilot study.https://doi.org/10.1177/2382120520927382 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Karl Martin Sattelmayer Kavi C. Jagadamma Roger Hilfiker Gillian Baer |
spellingShingle |
Karl Martin Sattelmayer Kavi C. Jagadamma Roger Hilfiker Gillian Baer Acquisition of Procedural Skills in Preregistration Physiotherapy Education Comparing Mental Practice Against No Mental Practice: The Learning of Procedures in Physiotherapy Education Trial – A Development of Concept Study Journal of Medical Education and Curricular Development |
author_facet |
Karl Martin Sattelmayer Kavi C. Jagadamma Roger Hilfiker Gillian Baer |
author_sort |
Karl Martin Sattelmayer |
title |
Acquisition of Procedural Skills in Preregistration Physiotherapy Education Comparing Mental Practice Against No Mental Practice: The Learning of Procedures in Physiotherapy Education Trial – A Development of Concept Study |
title_short |
Acquisition of Procedural Skills in Preregistration Physiotherapy Education Comparing Mental Practice Against No Mental Practice: The Learning of Procedures in Physiotherapy Education Trial – A Development of Concept Study |
title_full |
Acquisition of Procedural Skills in Preregistration Physiotherapy Education Comparing Mental Practice Against No Mental Practice: The Learning of Procedures in Physiotherapy Education Trial – A Development of Concept Study |
title_fullStr |
Acquisition of Procedural Skills in Preregistration Physiotherapy Education Comparing Mental Practice Against No Mental Practice: The Learning of Procedures in Physiotherapy Education Trial – A Development of Concept Study |
title_full_unstemmed |
Acquisition of Procedural Skills in Preregistration Physiotherapy Education Comparing Mental Practice Against No Mental Practice: The Learning of Procedures in Physiotherapy Education Trial – A Development of Concept Study |
title_sort |
acquisition of procedural skills in preregistration physiotherapy education comparing mental practice against no mental practice: the learning of procedures in physiotherapy education trial – a development of concept study |
publisher |
SAGE Publishing |
series |
Journal of Medical Education and Curricular Development |
issn |
2382-1205 |
publishDate |
2020-06-01 |
description |
Introduction: Procedural skills are a central element in the education of physiotherapists. Procedural skills relate to the execution of a practical task. An educational intervention, which can be used to support skill acquisition of procedural skills, is mental practice (MP). Several studies have investigated the use of MP or imaging in medical education. This pilot study evaluated the application of MP on the acquisition of procedural skills in physiotherapy education. Methods: This pilot randomised controlled study recruited a convenience sample of 37 BSc physiotherapy student participants. Two different complex task procedures (transfer and vestibular rehabilitation) were trained during this study. Participants in both the transfer (task procedure 1) and the vestibular rehabilitation (task procedure 2) arm of the study were randomly assigned to either MP or no MP. Results: For the transfer task, median performance at post-acquisition testing showed a moderate effect size in favour of the group using MP ( r : −0.3), but the findings were not statistically significant ( P : 0.2). Similar results were found for the vestibular rehabilitation task ( r : 0.29; P : 0.21). In addition, the self-reported confidence was higher in the MP group. Conclusion: Moderate effect sizes were identified in favour of MP at post-acquisition testing. In addition, the between-group difference was higher than the minimally important difference. The feasibility of the study was high based on quantitative feasibility measures such as the recruitment rate. Both these findings suggest larger well-powered studies should be considered to confirm the findings of this pilot study. |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1177/2382120520927382 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT karlmartinsattelmayer acquisitionofproceduralskillsinpreregistrationphysiotherapyeducationcomparingmentalpracticeagainstnomentalpracticethelearningofproceduresinphysiotherapyeducationtrialadevelopmentofconceptstudy AT kavicjagadamma acquisitionofproceduralskillsinpreregistrationphysiotherapyeducationcomparingmentalpracticeagainstnomentalpracticethelearningofproceduresinphysiotherapyeducationtrialadevelopmentofconceptstudy AT rogerhilfiker acquisitionofproceduralskillsinpreregistrationphysiotherapyeducationcomparingmentalpracticeagainstnomentalpracticethelearningofproceduresinphysiotherapyeducationtrialadevelopmentofconceptstudy AT gillianbaer acquisitionofproceduralskillsinpreregistrationphysiotherapyeducationcomparingmentalpracticeagainstnomentalpracticethelearningofproceduresinphysiotherapyeducationtrialadevelopmentofconceptstudy |
_version_ |
1724623543722835968 |