Advances in Medical Education and Practice (Dec 2023)

Blended Learning with Video Demonstrations Enhances Dental Students’ Achievements in Tooth Carving

  • Alzer H,
  • Ismail NH,
  • Alsoleihat F

Journal volume & issue
Vol. Volume 14
pp. 1425 – 1431

Abstract

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Heba Alzer,1 Noor H Ismail,1 Firas Alsoleihat1,2 1Department of Restorative Dentistry, School of Dentistry, The University of Jordan, Amman, Jordan; 2Department of Restorative Dentistry and Basic Medical Sciences, Faculty of Dentistry, University of Petra, Amman, 11196, JordanCorrespondence: Heba Alzer, Department of Restorative Dentistry, School of Dentistry, The University of Jordan, Amman, 11942, Jordan, Tel +96265355000-23537, Fax +962 6 5355 52, Email [email protected]: Learning fine motor skill is central to preclinical dental education. Dental students are introduced to anatomical tooth carving to facilitate the development of their fine motor skill and manual dexterity. Various carving technique exists, such as wax build-up, and geometric (block carving technique). Since substantial laboratory Time and instructors’ effort are required to teach students the desired techniques, blended learning approach via pre-recorded demonstration may improve the teaching and learning efficiency of anatomical tooth carving. For years, we used the Geometric method to teach preclinical dental students to carve down tooth sculptures after performing live demonstrations for them. Multiple practical laboratory demonstrations are necessary to deepen the student’s comprehensive understanding of dental anatomical features and teach them correct instrumentation; this is time-consuming and challenging due to limited laboratory hours and limited view field. Accordingly, in 2016 the teaching staff created videos for tooth drawing, carving, and identification, and uploaded them to the students’ university platform. Years later, we decided to perform this retrospective study.Objective: To assess the enhancement in students’ tooth carving skills after implementing blended learning with video demonstrations.Methods: The student’s total grades were used for comparative purposes. The students’ total grades between 2010 and 2019 were collected and categorized into two groups: Group 1 (n=858), which learned tooth carving by the Geometric method after live demonstrations, and Group 2 (972), which benefited from blended learning with video demonstrations in learning. The two groups’ mean, median, mode, Percentile 75, and Percentile 90 were compared.Results: Group 2 showed higher grades than group 1, and the differences between the two groups’ mean and median were statistically significant p< 0.001. Moreover, the mode, P75 and P90 favored group 2.Conclusion: Results show that blended learning with video demonstrations enhanced the achievements of dental students in tooth carving.Keywords: dental anatomy, blended learning, video demonstrations, dental morphology, tooth carving, dental education

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