With the recent focus in changing medical school educational pedagogy from a traditional lecture model to a problem-solving and critical-thinking model, Peer Instruction (PI) was instituted at Boonshoft School of Medicine (BSOM). Based on feedback from students, BSOM made several procedural changes between the 2014–2015 and 2015–2016 academic school year (AYs) to improve PI. One course, Medical Neuroscience (MN), was consistently identified by students to be the model for PI. The purpose of this study was to identify if student and faculty perceptions toward PI had changed between the two academic years and to elucidate differences between PI in the MN course and other courses. Among students, there was a 68.5% increase in positive attitude...
Background At Norwich Medical School, Year 3 or 4 medical students taking a year out of the 5-year u...
In peer instruction, instructors pose a challenging question to students, students answer the questi...
AbstractStudies on medical education suggest that Peer Assisted Learning (PAL) could be an acceptabl...
With the recent focus in changing medical school educational pedagogy from a traditional lecture mod...
In 1991, a physicist at Harvard University, Dr. Eric Mazur, implemented a new style of classroom lea...
ABSTRACT Peer Instruction (PI) is an interactive teaching-learning process between colleagues and ha...
Audrey Menezes,1,2 Annette Burgess,1 Antonia J Clarke,1,3 Craig Mellis1 1Central Clinical School, Sy...
PURPOSE: In undergraduate medical education, peer-teaching has become an established and common meth...
Background: In peer teaching, students act as both teachers and learners. Peer teaching can be a use...
Peer Instruction (PI) is a vibrant instructional strategy, used successfully for over two decades in...
ABSTRACT Helping students learn is faculty’s raison d’etre. There are many ways to achieve this aim ...
Background: At Norwich Medical School, Year 3 or 4 medical students taking a year out of the 5-year ...
Purpose of study Peer teaching (PT) has become increasingly popular. PT may offer benefits for stude...
Tzu-Chieh Yu¹, Nichola C Wilson², Primal P Singh¹, Daniel P Lemanu&su...
Introduction: Peer assisted learning (PAL) is the expansion of knowledge and abilities through activ...
Background At Norwich Medical School, Year 3 or 4 medical students taking a year out of the 5-year u...
In peer instruction, instructors pose a challenging question to students, students answer the questi...
AbstractStudies on medical education suggest that Peer Assisted Learning (PAL) could be an acceptabl...
With the recent focus in changing medical school educational pedagogy from a traditional lecture mod...
In 1991, a physicist at Harvard University, Dr. Eric Mazur, implemented a new style of classroom lea...
ABSTRACT Peer Instruction (PI) is an interactive teaching-learning process between colleagues and ha...
Audrey Menezes,1,2 Annette Burgess,1 Antonia J Clarke,1,3 Craig Mellis1 1Central Clinical School, Sy...
PURPOSE: In undergraduate medical education, peer-teaching has become an established and common meth...
Background: In peer teaching, students act as both teachers and learners. Peer teaching can be a use...
Peer Instruction (PI) is a vibrant instructional strategy, used successfully for over two decades in...
ABSTRACT Helping students learn is faculty’s raison d’etre. There are many ways to achieve this aim ...
Background: At Norwich Medical School, Year 3 or 4 medical students taking a year out of the 5-year ...
Purpose of study Peer teaching (PT) has become increasingly popular. PT may offer benefits for stude...
Tzu-Chieh Yu¹, Nichola C Wilson², Primal P Singh¹, Daniel P Lemanu&su...
Introduction: Peer assisted learning (PAL) is the expansion of knowledge and abilities through activ...
Background At Norwich Medical School, Year 3 or 4 medical students taking a year out of the 5-year u...
In peer instruction, instructors pose a challenging question to students, students answer the questi...
AbstractStudies on medical education suggest that Peer Assisted Learning (PAL) could be an acceptabl...