Abstract

BackgroundSelf-explanation without feedback has been shown to improve medical students’ diagnostic reasoning. While feedback is generally seen as beneficial for learning, available evidence of the value of its combination with self-explanation is conflicting. This study investigated the effect on medical students’ diagnostic performance of adding immediate or delayed content-feedback to self-explanation while solving cases.MethodsNinety-four 3rd-year students from a Canadian medical school were randomly assigned to three experimental conditions (immediate-feedback, delayed-feedback, control). In the learning phase, all students solved four clinical cases by giving i) the most likely diagnosis, ii) two main arguments supporting this diagnosis, and iii) two plausible alternative diagnoses, while using self-explanation. The immediate-feedback group was given the correct diagnosis after each case; delayed-feedback group received the correct diagnoses only after the four cases; control group received no feedback. One week later, all students solved four near-transfer (i.e., same final diagnosis as the learning cases but different scenarios) and four far-transfer cases (i.e., different final diagnosis from the learning cases and different scenarios) by answering the same three questions. Students’ diagnostic accuracy (score for the response to the first question only) and diagnostic performance (combined score of responses to the three questions) scores were assessed in each phase. Four one-way ANOVAs were performed on each of the two scores for near and far-transfer cases.ResultsThere was a significant effect of experimental condition on diagnostic accuracy on near-transfer cases (p < .05). The immediate-feedback and delayed-feedback groups performed equally well, both better than control (respectively, mean = 90.73, standard deviation =10.69; mean = 89.92, standard deviation = 13.85; mean = 82.03, standard deviation = 17.66). The experimental conditions did not significantly differ on far-transfer cases.ConclusionsProviding feedback to students in the form of the correct diagnosis after using self-explanation with clinical cases is potentially beneficial to improve their diagnostic accuracy but this effect is limited to similar cases. Further studies should explore how more elaborated feedback combined with self-explanation may impact students’ diagnostic performance on different cases.

Highlights

  • Self-explanation without feedback has been shown to improve medical students’ diagnostic reasoning

  • In the perspective of optimizing the effect of SE as an instructional strategy while keeping this learning activity simple and practical for future implementation, we proposed to examine the effects on learning of feedback on the correct diagnosis and of its timing

  • In this experimental study, we studied the effect of adding immediate or delayed content feedback to selfexplanation on diagnostic performance and diagnostic accuracy in medical students at clerkship level

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Summary

Introduction

Self-explanation without feedback has been shown to improve medical students’ diagnostic reasoning. This study investigated the effect on medical students’ diagnostic performance of adding immediate or delayed content-feedback to self-explanation while solving cases. Available evidence suggests that approaches oriented to teach the process of clinical reasoning (e.g., the hypothetico-deductive method) are not useful whereas interventions directed to help students build specific knowledge positively impact their diagnostic reasoning [5]. In comparison to students not using SE while solving cases, diagnostic performance of students who self-explained improved one week later on new (transfer) clinical cases. This happened without any specific feedback either on the content or on the quality of their self-explanations. The positive effect of SE on diagnostic reasoning seems to be further increased when students using SE with clinical cases are exposed to self-explanation models generated by a junior resident on the same cases [13]

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