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Attitudes of veterinary medical students and medical students toward collaborative learning: an experiment
16
Citations
3
References
2004
Year
Teacher EducationVeterinary Medical StudentsTeachingCollaborative LearningVeterinary ScienceSurgical TrainingEducationAllied Health ProfessionsPatient EducationSurgeryProfessional DevelopmentAttitude QuestionnaireVeterinary EducationMedicineMedical StudentsCompanion AnimalCooperative LearningInterprofessional Education
This study measured the attitudes of 55 medical students and 30 veterinary medical students as they participated in an experiment of collaborative teaching and learning about basic surgical skills. Two parallel forms of an attitude questionnaire were developed, with three subscales: confidence in one's own surgical skill; collaboration with the other type of student; and inter-professional collaboration in general. These attitude scales were administered before and after an experiment involving the veterinary medical students teaching the medical students incision and exploratory laparoscopy in a laboratory setting using live rabbits. After the experiment, measures of the medical students' attitudes had increased significantly on all three subscales. Measures of the veterinary students' attitudes increased significantly on two subscales but declined on the subscale of inter-professional collaboration.
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