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      • KCI등재

        Potential of feedback during objective structured clinical examination to evoke an emotional response in medical students in Canada

        Dalia Limor Karol,Debra Pugh 한국보건의료인국가시험원 2020 보건의료교육평가 Vol.17 No.-

        Feedback has been shown to be an important driver for learning. However, many factors, such as the emotional reactions feedbackevokes, may impact its effect. This study aimed to explore medical students’ perspectives on the verbal feedback they receive during anobjective structured clinical examination (OSCE); their emotional reaction to this; and its impact on their subsequent performance. Todo this, medical students enrolled at 4 Canadian medical schools were invited to complete a web-based survey regarding their experiences. One hundred and fifty-eight participants completed the survey. Twenty-nine percent of respondents asserted that they had experienced emotional reactions to verbal feedback received in an OSCE setting. The most common emotional responses reported wereembarrassment and anxiousness. Some students (n=20) reported that the feedback they received negatively impacted subsequentOSCE performance. This study demonstrates that feedback provided during an OSCE can evoke an emotional response in studentsand potentially impact subsequent performance.

      • MEDTalks: a student-driven program to enhance undergraduate student understanding and interest in medical schools in Canada

        Jayson Azzi,Dalia Karol,Tayler Bailey,Christopher Jerome Ramnanan 한국보건의료인국가시험원 2019 보건의료교육평가 Vol.16 No.-

        Given the lack of programs geared towards educating undergraduate students about medical school, the purpose of this study was to evaluate whether a medical student-driven initiative program, MEDTalks, enhanced undergraduate students’ understanding of medical school in Canada and stimulated their interest in pursuing medicine. The MEDTalks program, which ran between January and April 2018 at the University of Ottawa, consisted of 5 teaching sessions, each including large-group lectures, small-group case-based learning, physical skills tutorials, and anatomy lab demonstrations, to mimic the typical medical school curriculum. At the end of the program, undergraduate student learners were invited to complete a feedback questionnaire. Twenty-nine participants provided feedback, of whom 25 reported that MEDTalks allowed them to gain exposure to the University of Ottawa medical program; 27 said that it gave them a greater understanding of the teaching structure; and 25 responded that it increased their interest in attending medical school. The MEDTalks program successfully developed a greater understanding of medical school and helped stimulate interest in pursuing medical studies among undergraduate students.

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