Cargando…

P111 SMILE: Sustaining Medical Education In a Lockdown Environment. Student perceptions of a free online access medical education platform as an adjunct to the traditional undergraduate curriculum during lockdown

INTRODUCTION: The coronavirus outbreak has had significant impact on medical students worldwide. SMILE is a free online access medical education (FOAMed) platform. SMILE delivered 200 lectures during lockdown with up to 1400 students per session from both UK medical schools and 33 abroad. Here we di...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Pascoe, John, Foster, Paul, Quddus, Muntasha, Kosti, Angeliki, Guest, Francesca, Stevens, Sian, Bamford, Richard, Coulston, James
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8030175/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/bjsopen/zrab032.110
_version_ 1783676085500641280
author Pascoe, John
Foster, Paul
Quddus, Muntasha
Kosti, Angeliki
Guest, Francesca
Stevens, Sian
Bamford, Richard
Coulston, James
author_facet Pascoe, John
Foster, Paul
Quddus, Muntasha
Kosti, Angeliki
Guest, Francesca
Stevens, Sian
Bamford, Richard
Coulston, James
author_sort Pascoe, John
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: The coronavirus outbreak has had significant impact on medical students worldwide. SMILE is a free online access medical education (FOAMed) platform. SMILE delivered 200 lectures during lockdown with up to 1400 students per session from both UK medical schools and 33 abroad. Here we discuss student perceptions to SMILE during lockdown METHOD: An electronic survey was used to collect information from students who had utilised the platform during lockdown. This examined access to learning, impact on their mental health during lockdown and the differences between FOAMed and more traditional based campus lecture based learning. RESULTS: 1306 students responded to the anonymous survey with 94% of students stating SMILE had been “extremely useful” or “very useful” at supplementing learning during covid. 71% of students stated lockdown had affected their stress levels and 44% reported deterioration in their mental health. >80% felt SMILE improved stress levels by adding structure and providing motivation. Students attended 4.3hours/week of university teaching, vs 7.9hours/week by SMILE. Positives included: anonymity, making 80% more likely to both ask and answer questions, the informal approach, ease of access and enthusiastic teachers. Negatives included time differences and technical issues such as poor Internet. 98% stated they would be interested in future SMILE projects post lockdown CONCLUSIONS: SMILE addressed challenges identified during an unanticipated transition towards the online provision of medical education on an international scale. Students found SMILE lectures effective, accessible and safe, supporting FOAMed as part of the “new normal” post lockdown
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8030175
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-80301752021-04-13 P111 SMILE: Sustaining Medical Education In a Lockdown Environment. Student perceptions of a free online access medical education platform as an adjunct to the traditional undergraduate curriculum during lockdown Pascoe, John Foster, Paul Quddus, Muntasha Kosti, Angeliki Guest, Francesca Stevens, Sian Bamford, Richard Coulston, James BJS Open Poster Presentation INTRODUCTION: The coronavirus outbreak has had significant impact on medical students worldwide. SMILE is a free online access medical education (FOAMed) platform. SMILE delivered 200 lectures during lockdown with up to 1400 students per session from both UK medical schools and 33 abroad. Here we discuss student perceptions to SMILE during lockdown METHOD: An electronic survey was used to collect information from students who had utilised the platform during lockdown. This examined access to learning, impact on their mental health during lockdown and the differences between FOAMed and more traditional based campus lecture based learning. RESULTS: 1306 students responded to the anonymous survey with 94% of students stating SMILE had been “extremely useful” or “very useful” at supplementing learning during covid. 71% of students stated lockdown had affected their stress levels and 44% reported deterioration in their mental health. >80% felt SMILE improved stress levels by adding structure and providing motivation. Students attended 4.3hours/week of university teaching, vs 7.9hours/week by SMILE. Positives included: anonymity, making 80% more likely to both ask and answer questions, the informal approach, ease of access and enthusiastic teachers. Negatives included time differences and technical issues such as poor Internet. 98% stated they would be interested in future SMILE projects post lockdown CONCLUSIONS: SMILE addressed challenges identified during an unanticipated transition towards the online provision of medical education on an international scale. Students found SMILE lectures effective, accessible and safe, supporting FOAMed as part of the “new normal” post lockdown Oxford University Press 2021-04-08 /pmc/articles/PMC8030175/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/bjsopen/zrab032.110 Text en © The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of BJS Society Ltd. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) ), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercialre-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Poster Presentation
Pascoe, John
Foster, Paul
Quddus, Muntasha
Kosti, Angeliki
Guest, Francesca
Stevens, Sian
Bamford, Richard
Coulston, James
P111 SMILE: Sustaining Medical Education In a Lockdown Environment. Student perceptions of a free online access medical education platform as an adjunct to the traditional undergraduate curriculum during lockdown
title P111 SMILE: Sustaining Medical Education In a Lockdown Environment. Student perceptions of a free online access medical education platform as an adjunct to the traditional undergraduate curriculum during lockdown
title_full P111 SMILE: Sustaining Medical Education In a Lockdown Environment. Student perceptions of a free online access medical education platform as an adjunct to the traditional undergraduate curriculum during lockdown
title_fullStr P111 SMILE: Sustaining Medical Education In a Lockdown Environment. Student perceptions of a free online access medical education platform as an adjunct to the traditional undergraduate curriculum during lockdown
title_full_unstemmed P111 SMILE: Sustaining Medical Education In a Lockdown Environment. Student perceptions of a free online access medical education platform as an adjunct to the traditional undergraduate curriculum during lockdown
title_short P111 SMILE: Sustaining Medical Education In a Lockdown Environment. Student perceptions of a free online access medical education platform as an adjunct to the traditional undergraduate curriculum during lockdown
title_sort p111 smile: sustaining medical education in a lockdown environment. student perceptions of a free online access medical education platform as an adjunct to the traditional undergraduate curriculum during lockdown
topic Poster Presentation
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8030175/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/bjsopen/zrab032.110
work_keys_str_mv AT pascoejohn p111smilesustainingmedicaleducationinalockdownenvironmentstudentperceptionsofafreeonlineaccessmedicaleducationplatformasanadjuncttothetraditionalundergraduatecurriculumduringlockdown
AT fosterpaul p111smilesustainingmedicaleducationinalockdownenvironmentstudentperceptionsofafreeonlineaccessmedicaleducationplatformasanadjuncttothetraditionalundergraduatecurriculumduringlockdown
AT quddusmuntasha p111smilesustainingmedicaleducationinalockdownenvironmentstudentperceptionsofafreeonlineaccessmedicaleducationplatformasanadjuncttothetraditionalundergraduatecurriculumduringlockdown
AT kostiangeliki p111smilesustainingmedicaleducationinalockdownenvironmentstudentperceptionsofafreeonlineaccessmedicaleducationplatformasanadjuncttothetraditionalundergraduatecurriculumduringlockdown
AT guestfrancesca p111smilesustainingmedicaleducationinalockdownenvironmentstudentperceptionsofafreeonlineaccessmedicaleducationplatformasanadjuncttothetraditionalundergraduatecurriculumduringlockdown
AT stevenssian p111smilesustainingmedicaleducationinalockdownenvironmentstudentperceptionsofafreeonlineaccessmedicaleducationplatformasanadjuncttothetraditionalundergraduatecurriculumduringlockdown
AT bamfordrichard p111smilesustainingmedicaleducationinalockdownenvironmentstudentperceptionsofafreeonlineaccessmedicaleducationplatformasanadjuncttothetraditionalundergraduatecurriculumduringlockdown
AT coulstonjames p111smilesustainingmedicaleducationinalockdownenvironmentstudentperceptionsofafreeonlineaccessmedicaleducationplatformasanadjuncttothetraditionalundergraduatecurriculumduringlockdown