RESUMEN
Background: Digital media, such as podcasts, wikis, ePortfolios, and extended reality applications, provide excellent learning opportunities with a high degree of connectivity and flexibility for learners, as well as for learning facilitators. This not only enables location-independent and pandemic-resilient learning, but also a high degree of autonomy for the learners. The megatrend of digitalization opens up many possibilities, but there are also stumbling blocks and limitations. Objectives: This article is intended to provide readers in the emergency medicine/rescue field with an overview, various aspects to consider, and awareness of stumbling blocks. However, a balancing act between didactics and medicine as well as the heterogeneous group of addressees is necessary. Methods: By means of a narrative review, an assessment of digital media is made and subjected to an evaluation from the perspective of educational practice. Conclusion: Learning is not only changing due to new learning technologies, but also due to the growing importance of informal learning, the increasing significance of the ability to quickly access high-quality knowledge, faster-changing professional biographies, and the use of digital universal tools. Thus, in the jungle of possibilities, an estimation of scientific quality criteria is often difficult and a differentiated consideration is necessary. Basically, the question of appropriate methods must be asked and it must be critically questioned whether the learning/competency objectives can be achieved with the planned digitalized media. Digital media cannot and should not replace practical training in the workplace.