Abstract

This study was the fourth study (Study 4) of four consecutive cohort studies (2007/2008, 2008/2009, 2009/2010 and 2010/2011) of over 520 dental undergraduate first year students at King’s College London as part of their 5-year undergraduate programme. The study reported in this paper is a 2-year longitudinal investigation of 140 first year students (and subsequent second year) who were being trained to develop their clinical dental skills. In this study students used both the traditional Phantom-head laboratory and a haptically simulated virtual reality systems (HapTEL) laboratory to develop their basic clinical skills. Pre- and post-psychometric tests were used to measure their spatial reasoning and manipulation skills. The test scores and traditional clinical examinations results showed significant improvement in their psychomotor skills especially in the area of spatial awareness within a 3-months period (one term) of pre-clinical training. The results showed that using psychometric tests can reveal specific skill development amongst students not identified by traditional assessment methods. This study complements the previous studies in showing the development of psychomotor skills by practising virtual reality simulators can be monitored and measured through stages of skill acquisition more accurately and objectively. These results confirmed the consistency of skill improvement through the three phases of skill acquisition although more analysis is needed of the specific types of tests which reliably measured these skill phases. The result of this research could therefore inform the development of formative and summative dental clinical skills’ assessment to measure and monitor the student’s psychomotor training with more regular and instant feedback in an objective way using computers along with the traditional Phantom-head mannequin.

Highlights

  • The research study reported in this paper involved the fourth study (Study 4) of four consecutive student cohort studies conducted in 2007/2008, 2008/2009, 2009/2010 and 2010/2011 of over 520 dental undergraduate first year students in total at King’s College London (San Diego et al 2012; Shahriari-Rad 2014), followed by the 2nd year of the 2010/2011 entry cohort

  • The results showed that using psychometric tests can reveal specific skill development amongst students not identified by traditional assessment methods

  • These results confirmed the consistency of skill improvement through the three phases of skill acquisition more analysis is needed of the specific types of tests which reliably measured these skill phases

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Summary

Introduction

The research study reported in this paper involved the fourth study (Study 4) of four consecutive student cohort studies conducted in 2007/2008, 2008/2009, 2009/2010 and 2010/2011 of over 520 dental undergraduate first year students in total at King’s College London (San Diego et al 2012; Shahriari-Rad 2014), followed by the 2nd year of the 2010/2011 entry cohort. The study, reported in this paper, complements the previous studies by investigating the students’ skill acquisition over an 18-month period measuring the specific stages of students’ psychomotor skills enhanced by practising those skills using the virtual reality dental simulator. By measuring different psychomotor skills, it should be possible to distinguish these phases of skill acquisition between a novice and an expert practitioner These assessment techniques could help to shape the formative and summative assessment methods by identifying the skills acquisition stage of the trainees during their learning process. With large student cohorts (e.g. more than 50) and few tutors (2–3) present during their traditional phantom head simulator training sessions, such assessment techniques can rarely measure the actual procedure followed by every student to achieve the desired outcome. The assessment ratings can be subjective to the experience and opinion of the tutors rather than based on specific reproducible performance data (Shahriari-Rad 2012)

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