Abstract

ABSTRACT Medical education has been significantly changing in the last years, mainly due to new conceptions of the teaching-learning processes that advocate the employment of active methods of learning, such as Team-Based Learning (TBL). Peer-Assisted Learning (PAL) is a long-established strategy that has been used in several undergraduate courses. This study describes a pilot test of a new model of PAL developed with an adapted TBL strategy, that was called “PAL-TBL method”. The test occurred during Human Physiology classes with first-year Medical undergraduate students from Universidade de Pernambuco - Garanhuns Campus, Brazil. The PAL-TBL was designed as a teaching-learning methodology to improve academic education. Here, the organizational dynamics and the design of the activities carried out from 2016 to 2017 are reported. The resulting PAL-TBL methodology is characterized as the following: (i) timing I or material preparation (context/scenario) and study/analysis of the material by the participants; (ii) timing II or verification of prior knowledge (individual and team test), questioning and feedback and (iii) timing III or applying the concepts learned. It is worth mentioning that the end of timing II consisted of a moment for evaluating the team’s work and the materials used. Material production happened through the interaction between student-tutors and the (supervising) professor, aiming to share experiences as well as to elucidate the importance of using active methods during the academic development of useful competencies for medical practice. The methodology developed allowed students to reflect extensively on the problems presented in the class discussions, allowing for a richer learning experience. Further applications of PAL-TBL in advanced years of the course will be done to confirm the benefits of this hybrid strategy for medical education.

Highlights

  • Medical education has been changing in the last decades with the purpose of selecting the best ways to offer a better education[1]

  • The present paper describes one application of Team-Based Learning (TBL) in the Physiology Peer-Assisted Learning (PAL) in a Medical undergraduate class, here named PAL-TBL method

  • Planning for PAL-TBL PAL-TBL was planned according to Topping and Ehly[18], whose 13 dimensions were organized as follows: (1) curricular content: Human Physiology with the selected systems and issues demonstrated in Table 1; (2) tutoring teams: in both years, teams were composed of eight students, seven of whom were volunteers and one student was awarded a scholarship

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Summary

Introduction

Medical education has been changing in the last decades with the purpose of selecting the best ways to offer a better education[1] These changes aim mainly to develop professional profiles that include abilities beyond the well-established technical skills, to prepare students for the real world[2,3]. One example of such change is the current medical curricula of Brazilian universities that encompass professional competencies in three areas: health attention, education and management. New perspectives show that choosing educational strategies involves taking into account the expected outcomes or the joint use of these strategies[5]

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