Ontology highlight
ABSTRACT: Background
Accumulating data suggest that team-based learning (TBL) is more effective than lecture-based teaching strategies. Educational sessions at national meetings, however, tend to be lecture-based, and unlike most examples of TBL, involve participants who do not know each other or the instructor.Objective
We evaluated a 1-day TBL genomic pathology workshop for residents held at 3 national meetings.Methods
A committee of experts developed the workshop. Prior to attending, participants were provided access to readings and asked to answer preparation questions. Each of the 4 modules within the workshop consisted of a 60-minute TBL activity flanked by 15- to 30-minute preactivity and postactivity lectures. We used surveys to acquire participant evaluation of the workshop.Results
From 2013-2014, 86 pathology residents from 61 programs participated in 3 workshops at national meetings. All workshops were well received, with over 90% of attendees indicating that they would recommend them to other residents and that the material would help them as practicing pathologists. An incremental approach facilitated decreasing faculty presence at the workshops: the first 2 workshops had 7 faculty each (1 facilitator for each team and 1 circulating faculty member), while the final workshop involved only 2 faculty for 6 teams. For this final session, participants agreed that circulating faculty provided adequate support. Participant "buy-in" (requiring completion of a preworkshop survey) was critical in enabling a TBL approach.Conclusions
These results demonstrate that TBL is a feasible and effective strategy for teaching genomic medicine that is acceptable to pathology residents at national meetings.
SUBMITTER: Haspel RL
PROVIDER: S-EPMC4763384 | biostudies-literature | 2016 Feb
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
Haspel Richard L RL Ali Asma M AM Huang Grace C GC
Journal of graduate medical education 20160201 1
<h4>Background</h4>Accumulating data suggest that team-based learning (TBL) is more effective than lecture-based teaching strategies. Educational sessions at national meetings, however, tend to be lecture-based, and unlike most examples of TBL, involve participants who do not know each other or the instructor.<h4>Objective</h4>We evaluated a 1-day TBL genomic pathology workshop for residents held at 3 national meetings.<h4>Methods</h4>A committee of experts developed the workshop. Prior to atten ...[more]