Abstract
Background: The Educational Environment (EE) has an extremely important role in effective student learning. The Dundee Ready Education Environment Measure (DREEM) is a validated and widely tool to assess the EE in health and particularly in dental professional education programs. Objective: This study aimed to compare male and female dental students' perception regarding DREEM inventory of EE in Jazan University. A cross-sectional questionnaire included questions on demographic information and the DREEM of EEs. Methods: DREEM was used to gather information from our BDS students’ program about the environment in our institution. The data were selected from 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th year students. Data from 330 participants were distributed manually. Other factors such as type of graduated school, level of education, student’s GPA, and monthly income of family were assessed. All the data were analyzed. Results: 286 (86%) of the students completed and returned the DREEM questionnaires. There was no statistically significant difference between genders with respect to mean scores of perceptions of learning. Also, there was a significant difference in terms of educational level, but no significant differences were observed in the DREEM subscales. The average overall DREEM score of the study subjects indicated a positive learning perception of 130.8 for males and 130.2 for females. The subscale for both genders involved students’ perception of learning as 32.1, the students’ perception of teaching as 29.1, while the students’ academic self-perception was 21.7. The students’ self-perception of atmosphere was 30.0 while students’ social self-perception accounted for 17.5. Conclusion: Both gender students recorded positive values of the learning environment. Further, a qualitative investigation is recommended to be done on every single course to evaluate the changes and make necessary alterations.
Highlights
The perceptions held by students seeking careers in the dental health profession form a key component of the evaluation process in academic medical programs [1]
Given its global recognition and acceptance as a robust tool for measuring the EE, many studies have relied upon the Dundee Ready Education Environment Measure (DREEM) questionnaire, whose findings are regularly published in highly reputable journals [4 - 6, 8]
Just over half (50.3%) of the students had an average of good grade point average (GPA) (i.e., 2.75-3.74), followed by one-third of the students (31.8%) whose grades were very good (3.75-4.49)
Summary
The perceptions held by students seeking careers in the dental health profession form a key component of the evaluation process in academic medical programs [1]. It was planned and designed to accurately quantify the EE for all health-related professional schools [5], consisting of 50 questions related to a range of topics directly relevant to EE This inventory can be administered during a teaching session with written or verbal responses, or via students’ email or through a postal survey. Students are asked to read each statement carefully and to respond using a 5-point Likert-type scale, ranging from “strongly agree” to “strongly disagree” [1, 2] It is imperative, that each student respondent applies the items to their own current learning situation and that all 50 questions are answered [5, 7]. The Dundee Ready Education Environment Measure (DREEM) is a validated and widely tool to assess the EE in health and in dental professional education programs
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