TY - JOUR
T1 - Perception of health care students towards lectures as a teaching and learning method in the COVID era - A multicentric cross-sectional study from India
AU - Singh, Vijay Pratap
AU - Ramakrishna, Anand
AU - Sinha, Neloy
AU - Khandelwal, Bidita
AU - Joseph, Nitin
AU - Barua, Purnima
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Singh VP et al.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - The sudden precipitation of the pandemic forced undergraduates to take refuge at home, deserting the campus. Consequently, the age-old classroom in person teaching-learning (T-L) method shifted and lessons had to be conducted online. In previous decades, archetypical classroom lectures survived a lot of criticism in the face of the quasi-passive nature of T-L methodology. There are very few studies that reflect undergraduate students' perceptions of lectures. This study aimed to evaluate undergraduate students' perceptions of lectures using an online questionnaire with 13 items, which was circulated to undergraduate students of medical, physiotherapy, and nursing courses in three settings at different locations of private and public health schools. There was a total of 877 responses. The surveyed students were in favor of lectures and considered them indispensable for undergraduate learning. They preferred it as a kind of organized learning through the teacher's own experiences. Our study suggests that it is not the 'lecture' that requires mending but possibly teachers require better training, application of effective audio-visual aids, and innovative techniques to sustain students' interest in the class.
AB - The sudden precipitation of the pandemic forced undergraduates to take refuge at home, deserting the campus. Consequently, the age-old classroom in person teaching-learning (T-L) method shifted and lessons had to be conducted online. In previous decades, archetypical classroom lectures survived a lot of criticism in the face of the quasi-passive nature of T-L methodology. There are very few studies that reflect undergraduate students' perceptions of lectures. This study aimed to evaluate undergraduate students' perceptions of lectures using an online questionnaire with 13 items, which was circulated to undergraduate students of medical, physiotherapy, and nursing courses in three settings at different locations of private and public health schools. There was a total of 877 responses. The surveyed students were in favor of lectures and considered them indispensable for undergraduate learning. They preferred it as a kind of organized learning through the teacher's own experiences. Our study suggests that it is not the 'lecture' that requires mending but possibly teachers require better training, application of effective audio-visual aids, and innovative techniques to sustain students' interest in the class.
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U2 - 10.12688/f1000research.110100.2
DO - 10.12688/f1000research.110100.2
M3 - Article
C2 - 36339975
AN - SCOPUS:85141413110
SN - 2046-1402
VL - 11
SP - 1
EP - 14
JO - F1000Research
JF - F1000Research
M1 - 665
ER -