Design considerations for delivering e-learning to surgical trainees

Coughlan, J., Willem-Paul Brinkman. Design considerations for delivering e-learning to surgical trainees. International journal of e-health and medical communications, 2(2):14-23, 2011. [doi]

Abstract

The challenges in leveraging e-health technologies for continuous medical education/professional development remain. This study seeks to understand the interface design and learning process features relating to the use of multimedia in providing effective support for the knowledge and practice of surgical skills. Twenty-one surgical trainees evaluated surgical content on a CD-ROM format based on 14 interface design and 11 learning process features using a questionnaire adapted from an established tool created to assess educational multimedia. Significant Spearman{\textquoteright}s correlations were found for seven of the 14 interface design features \textendash {\textquoteleft}Navigation{\textquoteright}, {\textquoteleft}Learning demands{\textquoteright}, {\textquoteleft}Videos{\textquoteright}, {\textquoteleft}Media integration{\textquoteright}, {\textquoteleft}Level of material{\textquoteright}, {\textquoteleft}Information presentation{\textquoteright} and {\textquoteleft}Overall functionality{\textquoteright}, explaining ratings of the learning process. The interplay of interface design and learning process features of educational multimedia highlight key design considerations in e-learning. An understanding of these features is relevant to the delivery of surgical training, reflecting the current state of the art in transferring static CD-ROM content to the dynamic web or creating CD/web hybrid models of education.

Technical report

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