The Impact of E-Learning in Medical Education
Top Cited Papers
- 1 March 2006
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Academic Medicine
- Vol. 81 (3) , 207-212
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00001888-200603000-00002
Abstract
The authors provide an introduction to e-learning and its role in medical education by outlining key terms, the components of e-learning, the evidence for its effectiveness, faculty development needs for implementation, evaluation strategies for e-learning and its technology, and how e-learning might be considered evidence of academic scholarship. E-learning is the use of Internet technologies to enhance knowledge and performance. E-learning technologies offer learners control over content, learning sequence, pace of learning, time, and often media, allowing them to tailor their experiences to meet their personal learning objectives. In diverse medical education contexts, e-learning appears to be at least as effective as traditional instructor-led methods such as lectures. Students do not see e-learning as replacing traditional instructor-led training but as a complement to it, forming part of a blended-learning strategy. A developing infrastructure to support e-learning within medical education includes repositories, or digital libraries, to manage access to e-learning materials, consensus on technical standardization, and methods for peer review of these resources. E-learning presents numerous research opportunities for faculty, along with continuing challenges for documenting scholarship. Innovations in e-learning technologies point toward a revolution in education, allowing learning to be individualized (adaptive learning), enhancing learners' interactions with others (collaborative learning), and transforming the role of the teacher. The integration of e-learning into medical education can catalyze the shift toward applying adult learning theory, where educators will no longer serve mainly as the distributors of content, but will become more involved as facilitators of learning and assessors of competency.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- How Does Distance Education Compare With Classroom Instruction? A Meta-Analysis of the Empirical LiteratureReview of Educational Research, 2004
- Learning management systems: technology to measure the medical knowledge competency of the ACGMEMedical Education, 2004
- Reforming medical education to enhance the management of chronic diseaseThe Medical Journal of Australia, 2003
- Competency based medical training: review * Commentary: The baby is thrown out with the bathwaterBMJ, 2002
- Undergraduate medical education: Thoughts on future challengesBMC Medical Education, 2002
- Psychological myths in e-learningMedical Teacher, 2002
- Communication and information technology in medical educationThe Lancet, 2001
- Educational technology to facilitate medical studentsʼ learningAcademic Medicine, 1999
- Evolution of web site design: implications for medical education on the internetComputers in Biology and Medicine, 1998
- Educators must take the electronic revolution seriouslyAcademic Medicine, 1996