Student Perceptions and Grade Comparisons after Exposure to Instructor-Made Skills Videos in a Kinesiology Course

The purpose of this mixed method, descriptive case study was to determine whether the use of pre-recorded instructor-made videos (PRIMVs) in a kinesiology course, along with curricular design changes, facilitated increased conceptual and practical student learning. The study examined three student c...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Pamela Karp, Robert G. Kallagher
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Eastern Kentucky University 2019-01-01
Series:Journal of Occupational Therapy Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.26681/jote.2019.030307
id doaj-e4ac302fae1e4b20a7b2270c96a4942d
record_format Article
spelling doaj-e4ac302fae1e4b20a7b2270c96a4942d2020-11-24T20:51:01ZengEastern Kentucky UniversityJournal of Occupational Therapy Education2573-13782019-01-013310.26681/jote.2019.030307Student Perceptions and Grade Comparisons after Exposure to Instructor-Made Skills Videos in a Kinesiology CoursePamela Karp0Robert G. Kallagher1New York Institute of TechnologyNew York Institute of TechnologyThe purpose of this mixed method, descriptive case study was to determine whether the use of pre-recorded instructor-made videos (PRIMVs) in a kinesiology course, along with curricular design changes, facilitated increased conceptual and practical student learning. The study examined three student cohorts in one occupational therapy program. Two of the student cohorts had unrestricted access to the PRIMVs designed to support student learning of bone and muscle palpation and joint actions. Students from the two cohorts completed a survey about their experience of having access to the videos. Exam data from the student cohorts who had access to the videos was compared to exam data from an earlier cohort who had not been exposed to the videos. While no significant differences in the lab exam grades were noted, quantitative and qualitative data collected from the surveys revealed that students perceived that their overall course grade was higher and they were better prepared for clinical fieldwork as a result of having access to the videos. This study adds to the growing body of evidence that supports video technology as a supplemental learning tool in occupational therapy education.https://doi.org/10.26681/jote.2019.030307Mixed methodscurriculum designdigital technology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pamela Karp
Robert G. Kallagher
spellingShingle Pamela Karp
Robert G. Kallagher
Student Perceptions and Grade Comparisons after Exposure to Instructor-Made Skills Videos in a Kinesiology Course
Journal of Occupational Therapy Education
Mixed methods
curriculum design
digital technology
author_facet Pamela Karp
Robert G. Kallagher
author_sort Pamela Karp
title Student Perceptions and Grade Comparisons after Exposure to Instructor-Made Skills Videos in a Kinesiology Course
title_short Student Perceptions and Grade Comparisons after Exposure to Instructor-Made Skills Videos in a Kinesiology Course
title_full Student Perceptions and Grade Comparisons after Exposure to Instructor-Made Skills Videos in a Kinesiology Course
title_fullStr Student Perceptions and Grade Comparisons after Exposure to Instructor-Made Skills Videos in a Kinesiology Course
title_full_unstemmed Student Perceptions and Grade Comparisons after Exposure to Instructor-Made Skills Videos in a Kinesiology Course
title_sort student perceptions and grade comparisons after exposure to instructor-made skills videos in a kinesiology course
publisher Eastern Kentucky University
series Journal of Occupational Therapy Education
issn 2573-1378
publishDate 2019-01-01
description The purpose of this mixed method, descriptive case study was to determine whether the use of pre-recorded instructor-made videos (PRIMVs) in a kinesiology course, along with curricular design changes, facilitated increased conceptual and practical student learning. The study examined three student cohorts in one occupational therapy program. Two of the student cohorts had unrestricted access to the PRIMVs designed to support student learning of bone and muscle palpation and joint actions. Students from the two cohorts completed a survey about their experience of having access to the videos. Exam data from the student cohorts who had access to the videos was compared to exam data from an earlier cohort who had not been exposed to the videos. While no significant differences in the lab exam grades were noted, quantitative and qualitative data collected from the surveys revealed that students perceived that their overall course grade was higher and they were better prepared for clinical fieldwork as a result of having access to the videos. This study adds to the growing body of evidence that supports video technology as a supplemental learning tool in occupational therapy education.
topic Mixed methods
curriculum design
digital technology
url https://doi.org/10.26681/jote.2019.030307
work_keys_str_mv AT pamelakarp studentperceptionsandgradecomparisonsafterexposuretoinstructormadeskillsvideosinakinesiologycourse
AT robertgkallagher studentperceptionsandgradecomparisonsafterexposuretoinstructormadeskillsvideosinakinesiologycourse
_version_ 1716803003466383360