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      Computer-assisted instruction versus traditional lecture for medical student teaching of dermatology morphology: a randomized control trial.

      Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology
      Computer-Assisted Instruction, methods, Dermatology, education, Education, Medical, Undergraduate, Humans, Prospective Studies, Skin Diseases, diagnosis, pathology, Teaching

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          Abstract

          The effectiveness of computer-assisted instruction is unproven. To evaluate the effectiveness of an online computerized dermatology module compared to traditional lecture-based teaching to medical students. Medical students were randomized to two groups. Group 1 of 37 students had access to a computer-based dermatology tutorial. Group 2 of 36 students attended a lecture on skin morphology, identical to the tutorial, given by a dermatology faculty member. The main outcome was the total number of correct answers on a multiple-choice morphologic terminology final examination. The mean number of questions answered correctly was 16.14 and 14.89 for group 1 and group 2, respectively. Unpaired statistical t tests showed the difference in mean scores between the two groups to be 1.25 (95% confidence interval: -0.70 to 3.20, p value = .20). The study was small, with a small amount of material, and was brief in duration. Within the limits of our study, computer-assisted instruction is at least as effective as traditional lecture teaching of dermatology morphology to medical students.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          18499299
          10.1016/j.jaad.2008.04.026

          Chemistry
          Computer-Assisted Instruction,methods,Dermatology,education,Education, Medical, Undergraduate,Humans,Prospective Studies,Skin Diseases,diagnosis,pathology,Teaching

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