Friday, September 30, 2022

Online student tutorials for effective peer teaching in digital times: a longitudinal quantitative study, Teresa Festl-Wietek, et al; BMC Medical Education volume 22, Article number: 681 (2022)

Second-year medical students were invited to participate in this longitudinal quantitative study. Validated and self-developed questionnaires (e.g., Jefferson Empathy Scale) including 39 questions (rated on a 7- or 5-point Likert scale) were used to assess the different variables including interaction, verbal and nonverbal communication and students’ learning success.
Conclusions
Interaction as well as nonverbal and verbal communication occurred in the online format, indicating that online tutorials can be effective. The implementation of SPs increases the efficiency of synchronous online learning as it enhances the simulation of a real patient–physician encounter. Thus, online tutorials are a valuable amendment to medical education.