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  1. Home
  2. Division of Basic Medical Sciences
  3. Dr.Robert Ojiambo
  4. Distance Learning with Virtual Case-Based Collaborative Learning: Adaptation and Acceptability of Clinical Cases from an American Academic Medical Center for Education at an African Medical School
 
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Distance Learning with Virtual Case-Based Collaborative Learning: Adaptation and Acceptability of Clinical Cases from an American Academic Medical Center for Education at an African Medical School

Journal
Creative Education
ISSN
2151-4755-2151-4771
Date Issued
2022-04
Author(s)
Jane Thomas-Tran
Emily P. Thomas-Tran
Ruby E. Reed
Joshua Owolabi
Robert Ojiambo
Brooke Cotter
John Kugler
Anita Kishore
Abebe Bekele
Deogratias Ruhangaza
Arlene Nishimwe
Ornella Masimbi
Charles O. Odongo
Jean Paul Ndayizeye
Lars Osterberg
DOI
10.4236/ce.2022.134082
Abstract
We aimed to determine whether a Case-Based Collaborative Learning (CBCL) curriculum, developed from the clinical experience of U.S.-based clinicians in collaboration with Rwandan medical faculty, is acceptable, feasible to implement, and effective as a virtual educational tool for medical students in a resource-limited, global health setting. In this CBCL distance learning education, students were actively engaged and understood the case material and asked probing and insightful questions. Course evaluations showed that 106 of the 120 total student responses (88.3%) said that the difficulty level was “about right”, while only 11/120 (9.2%) said it was “too easy” and 3/120 (2.5%) said it was “too hard” providing evidence that even though the cases were largely based on clinical encounters at an American academic medical center, they are understandable, and at the appropriate level of difficulty for Rwanda-based medical students. Qualitative analysis from student comments found the CBCL method most helpful for students to develop diagnostic frameworks, and the practice of clinical reasoning using CBCL was engaging and interactive. This method of a virtual, international CBCL approach, was feasible, effective, and acceptable for students. A large majority of students found the sessions to be of appropriate difficulty and engaging. From the global health and inter-cultural exchange perspective, this collaboration demonstrates feasibility and acceptability of international partnerships. Using virtual, video conferencing technology, similar future collaborations can improve capacity building in lower-resource settings.

Keywords: Case-Based Collaborative Learning, Problem-Based Learning, Team-Based Learning, Clinical Reasoning, Global Health, Virtual Education, Medical Education, Diagnostic Frameworks
Subjects

Clinical Reasoning

Global Health

Virtual Education

Medical Education

American education

African Medical Schoo...

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ce_2022042016080507.pdf

Size

314.28 KB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum

(MD5):4fb71461d9e762066b0b422690565ef3

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