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MBChB 5th year student response To E-Learning within orthopaedic surgery during Covid-19

Background. With the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic and the subsequent country-wide lockdown, South African (SA) universities were forced to quickly adapt to teaching that minimised or eliminated in-person contact. The pandemic period necessitated rapid changes to the way in which learning occurs an...

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Main Author: Gamieldien, Hammaad
Other Authors: Kruger, Nicholas
Format: Thesis
Language:Eng
Published: Division of General Surgery 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Gamieldien, Hammaad
author2 Kruger, Nicholas
author_browse Gamieldien, Hammaad
Kruger, Nicholas
author_facet Kruger, Nicholas
Gamieldien, Hammaad
author_sort Gamieldien, Hammaad
collection Thesis
description Background. With the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic and the subsequent country-wide lockdown, South African (SA) universities were forced to quickly adapt to teaching that minimised or eliminated in-person contact. The pandemic period necessitated rapid changes to the way in which learning occurs and resulted in significant shifts in the academic environment. There is limited evidence in the literature to support e-learning in undergraduate orthopaedic training. This is the first study of its kind evaluating e-learning in orthopaedic surgery in a middle-to-low- income country. Objectives. To identify the University of Cape Town fifth-year MB ChB cohort's attitudes towards the e-learning component of blended learning during the COVID-19 pandemic. It also aimed to investigate whether e-learning facilitates comparable levels of confidence and results among students and face-to-face methods. Methods. Multi-year cross-sectional survey analysis was completed by retrospectively analysing the students' end-of-block evaluations and end-of-block marks. Responses from the cohorts between 2016 and 2020 were compared. Results. Regarding course definition, workload, course organisation, intended preparation and course presentation, the 2020 cohort's responses were similar to those of previous years. The 2020 cohort agreed that the e-learning material was relevant; this response was higher than in previous years. They also agreed that the online practical sessions were useful and that the course stimulated more interest. Significantly, they also strongly agreed that the online course was easier to attend and participate in than in previous years. The 2020 cohort perceived the end-of-block assessment to be somewhat unreasonable; however, this cohort yielded similar grades compared with previous cohorts. Subjectively, the students' responses to e-learning were positive, as many of them welcomed the usefulness and stimulation of online media as a study tool. Students felt that more time should be made available to work through online material and that there was incongruity between the content taught and the content of the endof-block assessments. Conclusion. Subjectively, the students' responses to e-learning were positive, as many of them welcomed the usefulness and stimulation of online media. With comparable outcomes in terms of student confidence and final marks (compared with traditional teaching only), it further encouraged a move towards formulating a novel blended learning curriculum. With these positive findings, we were able to explore the possibilities of developing an e-learning course curriculum incorporating international blended learning practices, using locally sourced SA evidence-based literature to provide orthopaedic teaching relevant to our unique setting.
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language Eng
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provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/40929 MBChB 5th year student response To E-Learning within orthopaedic surgery during Covid-19 Gamieldien, Hammaad Kruger, Nicholas General Surgery Background. With the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic and the subsequent country-wide lockdown, South African (SA) universities were forced to quickly adapt to teaching that minimised or eliminated in-person contact. The pandemic period necessitated rapid changes to the way in which learning occurs and resulted in significant shifts in the academic environment. There is limited evidence in the literature to support e-learning in undergraduate orthopaedic training. This is the first study of its kind evaluating e-learning in orthopaedic surgery in a middle-to-low- income country. Objectives. To identify the University of Cape Town fifth-year MB ChB cohort's attitudes towards the e-learning component of blended learning during the COVID-19 pandemic. It also aimed to investigate whether e-learning facilitates comparable levels of confidence and results among students and face-to-face methods. Methods. Multi-year cross-sectional survey analysis was completed by retrospectively analysing the students' end-of-block evaluations and end-of-block marks. Responses from the cohorts between 2016 and 2020 were compared. Results. Regarding course definition, workload, course organisation, intended preparation and course presentation, the 2020 cohort's responses were similar to those of previous years. The 2020 cohort agreed that the e-learning material was relevant; this response was higher than in previous years. They also agreed that the online practical sessions were useful and that the course stimulated more interest. Significantly, they also strongly agreed that the online course was easier to attend and participate in than in previous years. The 2020 cohort perceived the end-of-block assessment to be somewhat unreasonable; however, this cohort yielded similar grades compared with previous cohorts. Subjectively, the students' responses to e-learning were positive, as many of them welcomed the usefulness and stimulation of online media as a study tool. Students felt that more time should be made available to work through online material and that there was incongruity between the content taught and the content of the endof-block assessments. Conclusion. Subjectively, the students' responses to e-learning were positive, as many of them welcomed the usefulness and stimulation of online media. With comparable outcomes in terms of student confidence and final marks (compared with traditional teaching only), it further encouraged a move towards formulating a novel blended learning curriculum. With these positive findings, we were able to explore the possibilities of developing an e-learning course curriculum incorporating international blended learning practices, using locally sourced SA evidence-based literature to provide orthopaedic teaching relevant to our unique setting. 2025-02-12T10:30:12Z 2025-02-12T10:30:12Z 2024 2025-02-12T10:22:04Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MMed http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40929 Eng application/pdf Division of General Surgery Faculty of Health Sciences University of Cape Town
spellingShingle General Surgery
Gamieldien, Hammaad
MBChB 5th year student response To E-Learning within orthopaedic surgery during Covid-19
thesis_degree_str Master's
title MBChB 5th year student response To E-Learning within orthopaedic surgery during Covid-19
title_full MBChB 5th year student response To E-Learning within orthopaedic surgery during Covid-19
title_fullStr MBChB 5th year student response To E-Learning within orthopaedic surgery during Covid-19
title_full_unstemmed MBChB 5th year student response To E-Learning within orthopaedic surgery during Covid-19
title_short MBChB 5th year student response To E-Learning within orthopaedic surgery during Covid-19
title_sort mbchb 5th year student response to e learning within orthopaedic surgery during covid 19
topic General Surgery
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40929
work_keys_str_mv AT gamieldienhammaad mbchb5thyearstudentresponsetoelearningwithinorthopaedicsurgeryduringcovid19