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The use of role-play in the learning of medical terminology for online and face-to-face courses.
Del Moral, Brenda L M; VanPutte, Cinnamon L; McCracken, Barbara A.
Affiliation
  • Del Moral BLM; Edgewood College, Madison, Wisconsin, United States.
  • VanPutte CL; Southern Illinois University School of Dental Medicine, Alton, Illinois, United States.
  • McCracken BA; Southern Illinois University School of Dental Medicine, Alton, Illinois, United States.
Adv Physiol Educ ; 48(3): 578-587, 2024 Sep 01.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38841749
ABSTRACT
Student engagement while learning a new, unfamiliar vocabulary is challenging in health science courses. A group role-play activity was created to teach students medical terminology and learn why its correct usage is important. This activity brought engagement and relevance to a topic traditionally taught through lecture and rote memorization and led to the development of an undergraduate and a stand-alone introductory course to teach students medical terminology. The undergraduate course was designed to be a fully online medical terminology course for health science students and a face-to-face course for first-year dental students founded in active learning and group work. The course's centerpiece learning activity focused on using published case studies with role-play. In this group activity, students are challenged to interpret a published patient case study as one of the members of a healthcare team. This course models the group work inherent in modern health care to practice building community and practicing professional skills. This approach gives students the capacity to work asynchronously in a team-based approach using our learning management system's wiki tool and requires students to take responsibility for their learning and group dynamics. Students practice identification, writing, analyzing, and speaking medical terms while rotating through the roles. Students in both classes self-reported a 92% to 99% strong or somewhat agreement using a five-point Likert scale that the course pedagogy was valued and helpful in their learning of medical terminology. Overall, this method has proven to be an engaging way for students to learn medical terminology.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Role-play can engage students and encourage learning in identification, pronouncing, writing, and understanding medical terminology in multiple course formats.
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Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Terminology as Topic Limits: Humans Language: En Journal: Adv Physiol Educ Journal subject: EDUCACAO / FISIOLOGIA Year: 2024 Document type: Article Affiliation country: United States Country of publication: United States

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Terminology as Topic Limits: Humans Language: En Journal: Adv Physiol Educ Journal subject: EDUCACAO / FISIOLOGIA Year: 2024 Document type: Article Affiliation country: United States Country of publication: United States