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Evaluation by dental students of a communication skills course using professional role‐players in a UK school of dentistry
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2005
Year
Student TeachingScience TeachingEducationEducational CommunicationClinical DentistryTeaching MethodLikert ScaleProfessional PreparationCommunication Skills CourseClassroom PracticeBehavioral SciencesUk SchoolCurriculumProfessional Role‐playersBehavioural SciencesPerformance StudiesTeachingFuture Curriculum DevelopmentProfessional Development
This paper reports student (n = 180) feedback on the role-play teaching methodology used in behavioural sciences teaching at The School of Dentistry in Birmingham (UK). The feedback received on this well-established (since 1995) educational programme was collected via questionnaire (100% response rate), requiring Likert scale and free text responses. Generally students reported that they had enjoyed and valued the session. Over two-thirds (69.7%) of students rated the role-players as 'very real' and over three-quarters (78.9%) rated their feedback as 'very fair'. The data collected from this study will inform future curriculum development. Student feedback was very positive and demonstrated that the cohort (86% of all students studying in years 1, 2 and 3) found the use of professional role-players involved in behavioural sciences teaching to be both acceptable and valuable.
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