Show pageBacklinksCite current pageExport to PDFBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== Lecture ====== [[Web 2.0]] technologies (e.g., [[blog]]s, [[social network]]s, and [[wiki]]s) are increasingly being used by [[medical school]]s and [[postgraduate training]] programs as [[tool]]s for [[information]] dissemination. These technologies offer the unique opportunity to track [[metric]]s of user [[engagement]] and [[interaction]]. Davidson et al. employed Web 2.0 tools to assess academic [[behavior]]s among [[neurosurgery resident]]s. They performed a [[retrospective]] [[review]] of all [[education]]al [[lecture]]s, part of the core [[Neurosurgery Residency]] [[curriculum]] at the University of [[Toronto]], posted on the teaching website (www.TheBrainSchool.net). The [[website]] was developed using publicly available Web 2.0 [[platform]]s. Lecture usage was assessed by the number of clicks, and associations were explored with lecturer academic position, the timing of [[examination]]s, and [[lecture]]/subspecialty topic. The overall number of clicks on 77 lectures was 1079. Most of these clicks were occurring during the in-training examination month (43%). Click numbers were significantly higher on lectures presented by faculty (mean = 18.6, standard deviation ± 4.1) compared to those delivered by residents (mean = 8.4, standard deviation ± 2.1) (p = 0.031). Lectures covering topics in [[functional neurosurgery]] received the most clicks (47%), followed by pediatric neurosurgery (22%). This study demonstrates the value of Web 2.0 analytic tools in examining resident study behavior. [[Resident]]s tend to "[[cram]]" by downloading lectures in the same month of [[training]] [[examination]]s and display a preference for [[faculty]]-delivered [[lecture]]s ((Davidson B, Alotaibi NM, Guha D, Amaral S, Kulkarni AV, Lozano AM. Studying Behaviors Among Neurosurgery Residents Using Web 2.0 Analytic Tools. J Surg Educ. 2017 Nov-Dec;74(6):1088-1093. doi: 10.1016/j.jsurg.2017.05.019. Epub 2017 Jun 2. PMID: 28583426.)). ===== Video-based lecture ===== [[Video-based lecture]] lecture.txt Last modified: 2024/10/28 11:44by 127.0.0.1