Clinical and Translational Radiation Oncology (Jul 2021)

Impact of transitioning to an online course – A report from the ESTRO gyn teaching course

  • L.T. Tan,
  • K. Tanderup,
  • A. Nappa,
  • P. Petric,
  • I.M. Jürgenliemk-Schulz,
  • M. Serban,
  • J.V. Swamidas,
  • M. Palmu,
  • S.L. Duke,
  • U. Mahantshetty,
  • N. Nesvacil,
  • R.C. Pötter,
  • R.A. Nout

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 29
pp. 85 – 92

Abstract

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Introduction: In 2020, the ESTRO course on image-guided radiotherapy and chemotherapy in gynaecological cancer was converted into an online version due to the COVID-19 pandemic. This paper describes the change process and evaluates the impact on participants compared with previous live courses. Methods and materials: The 2019 live course contained 41 h of educational content, comprising 33 h of synchronous activities (lectures, interactive activities, videos) and 8 h of homework (contouring, dose planning). For the online course, the lectures were provided as pre-course material (11 mandatory, 22 optional). Contouring/dose planning homework was unchanged. The synchronous sessions were reconfigured as six 2-hour webinars (total educational content ~38 h).Participant numbers/characteristics, engagement and satisfaction for six live courses and the online course were compared. Results: Participant numbers for the online and live courses were similar (90 vs. mean 96). There were more participants from outside Europe (28% vs. mean 18%) and more non-doctors (47% vs. mean 33%). Proportion of participants responding to the pre-course questionnaire was similar (77% vs. mean 78%) but post-course questionnaire response was lower (62% vs. mean 92%).43% participants viewed ≥75% of mandatory lectures before the webinars. 86% viewed the optional lectures. Submissions of contouring and dose planning homework was higher (contouring 77%–90% vs. 56%–69%, dose planning 74%–89% vs. 29%–57%).96% (47/49) participants rated the online course as Excellent (43%) or Good (53%). Overall satisfaction was similar (4.4 vs. mean 4.6). Conclusion: Participant satisfaction and engagement with the online course remained high despite less contact time with faculty.

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