PLoS ONE (Jan 2021)

Effects of realistic e-learning cases on students' learning motivation during COVID-19.

  • Ann-Kathrin Rahm,
  • Maximilian Töllner,
  • Max Ole Hubert,
  • Katrin Klein,
  • Cyrill Wehling,
  • Tim Sauer,
  • Hannah Mai Hennemann,
  • Selina Hein,
  • Zoltan Kender,
  • Janine Günther,
  • Petra Wagenlechner,
  • Till Johannes Bugaj,
  • Sophia Boldt,
  • Christoph Nikendei,
  • Jobst-Hendrik Schultz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0249425
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 4
p. e0249425

Abstract

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BackgroundKeeping up motivation to learn when socially isolated during a pandemic can be challenging. In medical schools, the COVID-19 pandemic required a complete switch to e-learning without any direct patient contact despite early reports showing that medical students preferred face-to-face teaching in clinical setting. We designed close to real-life patient e-learning modules to transmit competency-based learning contents to medical students and evaluated their responses about their experience.MethodsWeekly e-learning cases covering a 10-week leading symptom-based curriculum were designed by a team of medical students and physicians. The internal medicine curriculum (HeiCuMed) at the Heidelberg University Medical School is a mandatory part of clinical medical education in the 6th or 7th semester. Case-design was based on routine patient encounters and covered different clinical settings: preclinical emergency medicine, in-patient and out-patient care and follow-up. Individual cases were evaluated online immediately after finishing the respective case. The whole module was assessed at the end of the semester. Free-text answers were analyzed with MaxQDa following Mayring`s principles of qualitative content analyses.ResultsN = 198 students (57.6% female, 42.4% male) participated and 1252 individual case evaluations (between 49.5% and 82.5% per case) and 51 end-of-term evaluations (25.8% of students) were collected. Students highly appreciated the offer to apply their clinical knowledge in presented patient cases. Aspects of clinical context, interactivity, game-like interface and embedded learning opportunities of the cases motivated students to engage with the asynchronously presented learning materials and work through the cases.ConclusionsSolving and interpreting e-learning cases close to real-life settings promoted students' motivation during the COVID-19 pandemic and may partially have compensated for missing bedside teaching opportunities.