Curriculum

Classroom Connectivity in a COVID Climate

Melissa Duckett (Jacksonville State University)

Relational connections are important in all learning environments. These connections between faculty and their students can be difficult in routine face-to-face classroom settings. Within a COVID climate, these connections become even harder to make and sustain.

Utilizing the educational model of a flipped-classroom approach, lectures can be delivered through audio recordings in shorter segments to hold the students’ attention. By dividing the class into smaller groups, the students are safely brought into the physical classroom to maintain contact between instructors and students safely and participate in active learning through activities and interactive question and answer sessions.

Students who feel there is a connection with their instructors have increased satisfaction, enhanced learning, and improved student performance. There is also a reduction in the student’s feelings of isolation, which can lead students to feel less accountable for their learning. By maintaining classroom connectivity between students and their instructors, a feeling of normalcy can be obtained for our students that are threatened within this current climate.

View the presentation recording below.

 

Implementation of a Virtual Interprofessional OSCE

Kathryn Bell (Pacific University); Pauline Cawley (Pacific University); Talina Corvus (Pacific University); Saje Davis-Risen (Pacific University); Matthew Hunsinger (Pacific University); Mónica Sarmiento (Pacific University)

Issue to be addressed: The purpose of this project was to investigate the feasibility of interprofessional (IP) objective structured clinical encounters (OSCEs) as a learning activity and assessment mechanism in an interprofessional education program.

Method: Originally designed for simulation rooms, the OSCEs were implemented using Zoom due to COVID-19 in April 2020.  Students completed three McMaster-Ottawa TOSCE stations (20 mins per station), followed by a debrief for all participants.  A validated, abbreviated version of the McMaster-Ottawa scoring rubric was utilized by faculty observers, and individual student scores were submitted using a Google form.

Outcomes: Positive student feedback highlighted the event's usefulness, effective delivery, and the importance of voluntary participation.  Kruskal-Wallis tests suggested differences on the collaborative patient performance item between the pediatric and diabetes cases only, with higher performance on Pediatric cases (M = 2.60, SD = .48) compared to Diabetes cases (M = .2.30, SD = .60), t(62) = -4.08, p < .001.  There were no significant differences across year in program, ps > .05.

Conclusion: The IP OSCE was feasible to implement and a valuable learning experience.

View the presentation recording below.

 

Clinical Education Task Force COVID-19 Webinar Series: Utilization, Evaluation, and Planning

Robert McLaughlin (Baylor College of Medicine); Laura Daily (Kindred Healthcare); Julie O'Sullivan Maillet (Rutgers)

Just weeks after the shutdown of many educational activities due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Clinical Education Task Force conducted the first in a series of national webinars on behalf of ASAHP for healthcare systems and education leaders facing unprecedented challenges to clinical curriculum delivery. Facing uncertainty about the virus—means of transmission, morbidity, and treatment—and its impact on higher education, ASAHP leaders and administration along with CETF members initiated the series, framing our initial response around CETF recommendations the Journal of Allied Health recently published promoting strategic academic and health care partnerships to prioritize evolving needs for current and future healthcare. Broad participation prompted further sessions on reintegrating clinical students, educational accreditors accommodations to the crisis, and integrating telehealth into healthcare curricula. More than 1000 unique participants joined the first four sessions. The presenters describe planning and implementation to date, participants, and evaluation of the webinars, and seek input on further topics and processes to extend this innovative learning platform.

Download PowerPoint slides here and view the recording below.