An exploratory study of co-location as a factor in synchronous, collaborative medical informatics distance education.
Locatis C, Berner ES, Hammack G, Smith S, Maisiak R, Ackerman MJ
BMC Res Notes. 2010 Feb 2;3:30. doi: 10.1186/1756-0500-3-30.
Abstract:
BACKGROUND This study determined differences in learning, judgments of teaching and technology, and interaction when videoconferencing was used to deliver instruction on telemedicine to medical students in conditions where they were co-located and dispersed. A lecture on telemedicine was given by videoconference to medical students at a distant site. After a question and answer period, students were then given search problems on the topic and encouraged to collaborate. Half the students were randomly assigned to a co-located condition where they received the presentation and collaborated in a computer lab, and half were assigned to a dispersed condition where they were located in different rooms to receive the presentation and collaborate online using the videoconferencing technology. Students were observed in both conditions and they individually completed a test on presentation content and a rating scale about the quality of the teaching and the technology. FINDINGS There were no differences between the two groups in the learning outcomes or judgments about the teaching and technology, with the exception that more students in the dispersed condition felt more interaction was fostered. The level and patterns of interaction were very different in the two conditions and higher for dispersed students. CONCLUSIONS Synchronous communication at a distance via videoconference may give sufficient sense of presence that the learning experience may be similar to that in actual classrooms, even when students are far apart. The technology may channel interaction in desirable ways.
Locatis C, Berner ES, Hammack G, Smith S, Maisiak R, Ackerman MJ. An exploratory study of co-location as a factor in synchronous, collaborative medical informatics distance education.
BMC Res Notes. 2010 Feb 2;3:30. doi: 10.1186/1756-0500-3-30.
PMID | PMCID