GMS Journal for Medical Education (Dec 2020)

Asynchronous, digital teaching in times of COVID-19: a teaching example from general practice

  • van der Keylen, Piet,
  • Lippert, Nikoletta,
  • Kunisch, Raphael,
  • Kühlein, Thomas,
  • Roos, Marco

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3205/zma001391
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 37, no. 7
p. Doc98

Abstract

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Background: The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic had a strong impact on academic teaching and could change it sustainably. Ad hoc digitization of teaching had to be carried out. General practice teaching situation: Education in general practice at the Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg (FAU) offers, in addition to the main lecture, various elective courses, clinical traineeships, internship as well as the elective part in the final practical year. The main lecture and one clinical elective course were offered digitally in the summer term 2020.Digital methods: In the main lecture, an adapted inverted-classroom concept was used. Podcasts and audio annotated videos were provided. Teaching materials were reflected via a weekly, 1hr video consultation and in a forum. An asynchronous learning module was developed for the elective course . Each module consisted of course preparation, podcasts and follow-ups as well as a supervised forum.Results: The main lecture (response rate =115/170; 67.6%) was rated on average. The same applies to the commented videos. The forum, reflective video consultation and teaching materials were rated on average. The predominantly desired forms of presence were (=54) and (=37).Discussion and implications: The digital restructuring enables students to work on the course contents independently. This requires self-regulation strategies, which in future shall be taught through portfolio work. The teaching focus shifts from a passive teaching format to an interactive one. First evaluation results showed a very good acceptance by the students.

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