Effect of Instructional Format on Veterinary Students’ Task Performance and Emotional State during a Simulation-Based Canine Endotracheal Intubation Laboratory: Handout versus Video
Autor: | Kevin Cosford, Jennifer L. Briere, Barbara Ambros, Carolyn Cartwright, Shannon G. Beazley |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
Veterinary medicine
020205 medical informatics 040301 veterinary sciences Endotracheal intubation 02 engineering and technology Education Simulation training Task (project management) 0403 veterinary science Learning styles Dogs Cronbach's alpha Task Performance and Analysis Intubation Intratracheal 0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineering medicine Animals Humans Generalizability theory Prospective Studies Students Simulation Training Simulation based General Veterinary Reproducibility of Results 04 agricultural and veterinary sciences General Medicine Anxiety Clinical Competence Educational Measurement medicine.symptom Education Veterinary Psychology |
Zdroj: | Journal of Veterinary Medical Education. 47:239-247 |
ISSN: | 1943-7218 0748-321X |
DOI: | 10.3138/jvme.0618-077r1 |
Popis: | Video- versus handout-based instructions may influence student outcomes during simulation training and competency-based assessments. Forty-five third-year veterinary students voluntarily participated in a simulation module on canine endotracheal intubation. A prospective, randomized, double-blinded study investigated the impact of video ( n = 23) versus handout ( n = 22) instructions on student confidence, anxiety, and task performance. Students self-scored their confidence and anxiety before and after the simulation. During the simulation laboratory, three raters independently evaluated student performance using a 20-item formal assessment tool with a 5-point global rating scale. No significant between- or within-group differences ( p > .05) were found for both confidence and anxiety scores. Video-based instructions were associated with significantly higher ( p < .05) total formal assessment scores compared with handout-based instructions. The video group had significantly higher scores than the handout group on 3 of the 20 individual skills (items) assessed: placement of tie to the adaptor–endotracheal tube complex ( p < .05), using the anesthetic machine ( p < .01), and pop-off valve management ( p < .001). Inter-rater reliability as assessed by Cronbach’s α (.92), and Kendall’s W (.89) was excellent and almost perfect, respectively. A two-faceted crossed-design generalizability analysis yielded G coefficients for both the handout ( Ep2 = .68) and the video ( Ep2 = .72) groups. Video instructions may be associated with higher performance scores than handout instructions during endotracheal intubation simulation training. Further research into skill retention and learning styles is warranted. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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