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AuthorWilbur K.
AuthorJewesson P.
Available date2024-11-04T04:23:45Z
Publication Date2010
Publication NameAmerican journal of pharmaceutical education
ResourceScopus
ISSN15536467
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10576/60802
AbstractTo the Editor. We read with great interest the article, "Impact of Online Lecture-capture on Student Outcomes in a Therapeutics Course." We commend the authors for exploring this ancillary teaching technology and attempting to assess its impact on student outcomes, including course grades and class attendance. We believe a number of their findings merit comment. While the authors demonstrated that final examination scores were higher in the study group, use of historic controls threatens the validity of this comparison, as confounding factors such as course modifications, differences among student cohorts in scholastic ability, and related factors were not formally considered. We were not surprised to learn that the investigators were unable to identify a relationship between accession volume and final course grades, because access is only 1 variable that will determine academic performance, and both academically strong and weak students would be expected to access lecture-capture materials.
Languageen
PublisherAmerican Association of Colleges of Pharmacy (AACP)
Subjectclinical pharmacology
education
human
methodology
note
teaching
Computer-Assisted Instruction
Education, Pharmacy
Humans
Pharmacology, Clinical
TitleLecture-capture: the early Qatar experience.
TypeOther
Issue Number10
Volume Number74
dc.accessType Open Access


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