Abstract

SUMMARYThe move toward increasing student-centered learning efforts and improving students' cognitive interaction with the course content is becoming increasingly evident in U.S. higher education. Pharmacy education is not an exception. However, such interactive learning may require consideration of alternative ways to deliver course content, especially for the large lecture class. For these and a variety of other reasons, pharmaceutical sciences educators have started looking to the Internet to support or supplant traditional instructional methodologies. The integration of Internet-based elements into pharmaceutical science course offerings familiarizes students with technologies and behaviors that are likely to persist and improve throughout their careers. In addition, the Internet provides students with enhanced opportunities to contact their instructors and augments the traditional audible form of content delivery. When lectures are supplemented with slide shows, animation, video clips, etc., students...

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