Abstract

BackgroundBy learning medical humanities, medical students are expected to shift from handling the diseases only to seeing a whole sick person. Therefore, understanding medical students’ learning process and outcomes of medical humanities becomes an essential issue of medical education. Few studies have been conducted to explore factors surrounding medical students’ learning process and outcomes of medical humanities. The objectives were: (1) to investigate the relationships between medical students’ conceptions of learning and strategies to learning; and (2) to examine the relationships between students’ strategies to learning and learning outcomes for medical humanities.MethodsWe used the modified Approaches to Learning Medicine (mALM) questionnaire and Conceptions of Learning Medicine (COLM) questionnaire to measure the medical students’ strategies to learning and conceptions of learning respectively. The learning outcome of medical humanities was measured using students’ weighted grade in a medical humanities course. The confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) was used to validate the COLM and mALM questionnaires, in which construct validity and reliability were assessed. Pearson’s correlation was used to examine the relationships among the factors of COLM, mALM, and the weighted grade. Path analysis using structural equation modeling technique (SEM) was employed to estimate the structural relationships among the COLM, mALM, and the weighted grade.ResultsTwo hundred and seventy-five first-year medical students consented to participate in this study. The participants adopting surface strategies to learning were more likely to have unsatisfactory learning outcome (β = − 0.14, p = .04). The basic-level conception of “Preparing for Testing” was negatively (β = − 0.19, p < .01) associated with deep strategies of learning, and positively (β = 0.48, p < .01) associated with surface strategies of learning (β = 0.50, p < .01). The basic-level conception of “Skills Acquisition” was positively associated with deep strategies of learning (β = 0.23, p < .01).ConclusionMedical educators should wisely employ teaching strategies to increase students’ engagement with deep and self-directed learning strategies, and to avoid using surface learning strategies in the medical humanities course in order to achieve better learning outcomes.

Highlights

  • IntroductionMedical students are expected to shift from handling the diseases only to seeing a whole sick person

  • By learning medical humanities, medical students are expected to shift from handling the diseases only to seeing a whole sick person

  • Conclusions the importance of incorporating medical humanities to both undergraduate and post-graduate medical education is continuously emphasized, medical humanities remained an unappealing part in medical curriculum

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Summary

Introduction

Medical students are expected to shift from handling the diseases only to seeing a whole sick person. Understanding medical students’ learning process and outcomes of medical humanities becomes an essential issue of medical education. Given that medical humanities is considered as shifting medicine from handling the diseases only to seeing a whole sick person [3], and that learning medical humanities is expected to prepare medical students for responding appropriately to complex clinical contexts [4], there has been a consensus that medical humanities should be integrated into the medical curriculum [5]. Understanding medical students’ learning process and learning outcomes of medical humanities courses becomes an essential issue of medical education. Among the factors which influence learning outcomes, conceptions of learning and approaches to learning have been reported as two of the most influential factors on students’ learning [7,8,9,10,11]

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