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Preliminary report of a Web-based instrument to assess and teach knowledge and clinical thinking to medical student

OBJECTIVES: We report the preliminary development of a unique Web-based instrument for assessing and teaching knowledge and developing clinical thinking called the “Sequential Questions and Answers” (SQA) test. Included in this feasibility report are physicians’ answers to the Sequential Questions a...

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Autores principales: Stein, Gerald H., Tokunaga, Hironobu, Ando, Hirotaka, Obika, Mikako, Miyoshi, Tomoko, Tokuda, Yasuharu, Bautista, Miho, Kataoka, Hitomi, Terasawa, Hidekazu
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: IJME 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4207184/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25341203
http://dx.doi.org/10.5116/ijme.52a7.7280
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author Stein, Gerald H.
Tokunaga, Hironobu
Ando, Hirotaka
Obika, Mikako
Miyoshi, Tomoko
Tokuda, Yasuharu
Bautista, Miho
Kataoka, Hitomi
Terasawa, Hidekazu
author_facet Stein, Gerald H.
Tokunaga, Hironobu
Ando, Hirotaka
Obika, Mikako
Miyoshi, Tomoko
Tokuda, Yasuharu
Bautista, Miho
Kataoka, Hitomi
Terasawa, Hidekazu
author_sort Stein, Gerald H.
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: We report the preliminary development of a unique Web-based instrument for assessing and teaching knowledge and developing clinical thinking called the “Sequential Questions and Answers” (SQA) test. Included in this feasibility report are physicians’ answers to the Sequential Questions and Answers pre- and posttests and their brief questionnaire replies. METHODS: The authors refined the SQA test case scenario for content, ease of modifications of case scenarios, test uploading and answer retrieval. Eleven geographically distant physicians evaluated the SQA test, taking the pretest and posttest within two weeks. These physicians completed a brief questionnaire about the SQA test. RESULTS: Eleven physicians completed the SQA pre- and posttest; all answers were downloaded for analysis. They reported the ease of website login and navigating within the test module together with many helpful suggestions. Their average posttest score gain was 53% (p=0.012). CONCLUSIONS: We report the successful launch of a unique Web-based instrument referred to as the Sequential Questions and Answers test. This distinctive test combines teaching organization of the clinical narrative into an assessment tool that promotes acquiring medical knowledge and clinical thinking. We successfully demonstrated the feasibility of geographically distant physicians to access the SQA instrument. The physicians’ helpful suggestions will be added to future SQA test versions. Medical schools might explore the integration of this multi-language-capable SQA assessment and teaching instrument into their undergraduate medical curriculum.
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spelling pubmed-42071842014-10-23 Preliminary report of a Web-based instrument to assess and teach knowledge and clinical thinking to medical student Stein, Gerald H. Tokunaga, Hironobu Ando, Hirotaka Obika, Mikako Miyoshi, Tomoko Tokuda, Yasuharu Bautista, Miho Kataoka, Hitomi Terasawa, Hidekazu Int J Med Educ Research Article OBJECTIVES: We report the preliminary development of a unique Web-based instrument for assessing and teaching knowledge and developing clinical thinking called the “Sequential Questions and Answers” (SQA) test. Included in this feasibility report are physicians’ answers to the Sequential Questions and Answers pre- and posttests and their brief questionnaire replies. METHODS: The authors refined the SQA test case scenario for content, ease of modifications of case scenarios, test uploading and answer retrieval. Eleven geographically distant physicians evaluated the SQA test, taking the pretest and posttest within two weeks. These physicians completed a brief questionnaire about the SQA test. RESULTS: Eleven physicians completed the SQA pre- and posttest; all answers were downloaded for analysis. They reported the ease of website login and navigating within the test module together with many helpful suggestions. Their average posttest score gain was 53% (p=0.012). CONCLUSIONS: We report the successful launch of a unique Web-based instrument referred to as the Sequential Questions and Answers test. This distinctive test combines teaching organization of the clinical narrative into an assessment tool that promotes acquiring medical knowledge and clinical thinking. We successfully demonstrated the feasibility of geographically distant physicians to access the SQA instrument. The physicians’ helpful suggestions will be added to future SQA test versions. Medical schools might explore the integration of this multi-language-capable SQA assessment and teaching instrument into their undergraduate medical curriculum. IJME 2014-01-04 /pmc/articles/PMC4207184/ /pubmed/25341203 http://dx.doi.org/10.5116/ijme.52a7.7280 Text en Copyright: © 2014 Gerald H. Stein et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits unrestricted use of work provided the original work is properly cited. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
spellingShingle Research Article
Stein, Gerald H.
Tokunaga, Hironobu
Ando, Hirotaka
Obika, Mikako
Miyoshi, Tomoko
Tokuda, Yasuharu
Bautista, Miho
Kataoka, Hitomi
Terasawa, Hidekazu
Preliminary report of a Web-based instrument to assess and teach knowledge and clinical thinking to medical student
title Preliminary report of a Web-based instrument to assess and teach knowledge and clinical thinking to medical student
title_full Preliminary report of a Web-based instrument to assess and teach knowledge and clinical thinking to medical student
title_fullStr Preliminary report of a Web-based instrument to assess and teach knowledge and clinical thinking to medical student
title_full_unstemmed Preliminary report of a Web-based instrument to assess and teach knowledge and clinical thinking to medical student
title_short Preliminary report of a Web-based instrument to assess and teach knowledge and clinical thinking to medical student
title_sort preliminary report of a web-based instrument to assess and teach knowledge and clinical thinking to medical student
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4207184/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25341203
http://dx.doi.org/10.5116/ijme.52a7.7280
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