["Multimedia symposium wares". An enrichment of medical and graduate education?]

Standard

["Multimedia symposium wares". An enrichment of medical and graduate education?]. / Gawad, K A; Mehrabi, A; Streichert, Thomas; Jahnke, C; Schwarzer, H; Izbicki, J R; Kallinowski, F.

In: CHIRURG, Vol. 73, No. 5, 5, 2002, p. 508-513.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Gawad, KA, Mehrabi, A, Streichert, T, Jahnke, C, Schwarzer, H, Izbicki, JR & Kallinowski, F 2002, '["Multimedia symposium wares". An enrichment of medical and graduate education?]', CHIRURG, vol. 73, no. 5, 5, pp. 508-513. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12089837?dopt=Citation>

APA

Gawad, K. A., Mehrabi, A., Streichert, T., Jahnke, C., Schwarzer, H., Izbicki, J. R., & Kallinowski, F. (2002). ["Multimedia symposium wares". An enrichment of medical and graduate education?]. CHIRURG, 73(5), 508-513. [5]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12089837?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Gawad KA, Mehrabi A, Streichert T, Jahnke C, Schwarzer H, Izbicki JR et al. ["Multimedia symposium wares". An enrichment of medical and graduate education?]. CHIRURG. 2002;73(5):508-513. 5.

Bibtex

@article{14abbc5aa0f64b8fa731a7dd668c3734,
title = "[{"}Multimedia symposium wares{"}. An enrichment of medical and graduate education?]",
abstract = "The continual development of the internet has supported the spread of surgical knowledge by electronic means. High quality products have to be offered from a software as well as a contents point of view. The question as to whether these new media and their contents have a real value for efficient and motivating use in medical education needed to be answered by first assessing a quality profile for the development of surgical educational modules which were then evaluated on the basis of so-called {"}symposia ware{"}. First, the reactions and opinions of physicians at 47 universities were assessed by a standardized questionnaire concerning their demands on multimedia teaching/learning modules. Several different aspects of technique, content, presentation, didactics and background knowledge were analyzed. In a second step, their opinions were evaluated concerning two applications (symposia implemented on CD-ROM as a slideshow with original slides and audio) with surgical and gastroenterological contents by standardized questionnaire. Questions concerning personal background such as educational status and experience with computers, e-mail and the internet on one hand and the CD-ROM itself concerning content, relevance for daily clinical work and continuing medical education as well as the quality of the application on the other hand, were evaluated using marks (1 = best, 6 = worst). A total of 320 physicians participated in the first part of the interview. Of these, 93% were equipped with computers in hospital as well as privately. The Internet was used by 90% of them. The majority declined a full text presentation as well as the application of scroll fields. The participants rather favored the integration of text, pictures, animations and videos. Furthermore, 95% demanded the provision on the internet. Thirty-seven colleagues in their 5th (1-11) year of training were interviewed, and of those, 27 were working in a surgical department and 10 in a medical department. Individual computer knowledge was rated with a median of 3. This revealed that 60% were equipped with computers in hospital as well as at home, the remaining 40% had computers either in hospital or at home. All participants used the internet. In total, 57% had experience with {"}Symposia ware{"}. The rating of the {"}Symposia ware{"} itself was positive. Relevance and applicability of a slideshow for imparting knowledge were rated with a median of 2. This showed that 81% would buy the CD-ROM in principle, and 89% would spent up to 50 EUR. Quality, language, content and user-friendliness were all rated 2. Physicians frequently use computers and the internet. All this indicates a high degree of acceptance of electronic teaching/learning modules in medical education. A uniform structure of contents as well as a platform-independent, web-based presentation is appreciated. To enhance illustration, a picture and video-oriented visualization should be chosen. Overall, {"}symposia ware{"} is rated positively. It should cost no more than 50 EUR and it represents a valuable source of information for physicians.",
author = "Gawad, {K A} and A Mehrabi and Thomas Streichert and C Jahnke and H Schwarzer and Izbicki, {J R} and F Kallinowski",
year = "2002",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "73",
pages = "508--513",
journal = "CHIRURG",
issn = "0009-4722",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - ["Multimedia symposium wares". An enrichment of medical and graduate education?]

AU - Gawad, K A

AU - Mehrabi, A

AU - Streichert, Thomas

AU - Jahnke, C

AU - Schwarzer, H

AU - Izbicki, J R

AU - Kallinowski, F

PY - 2002

Y1 - 2002

N2 - The continual development of the internet has supported the spread of surgical knowledge by electronic means. High quality products have to be offered from a software as well as a contents point of view. The question as to whether these new media and their contents have a real value for efficient and motivating use in medical education needed to be answered by first assessing a quality profile for the development of surgical educational modules which were then evaluated on the basis of so-called "symposia ware". First, the reactions and opinions of physicians at 47 universities were assessed by a standardized questionnaire concerning their demands on multimedia teaching/learning modules. Several different aspects of technique, content, presentation, didactics and background knowledge were analyzed. In a second step, their opinions were evaluated concerning two applications (symposia implemented on CD-ROM as a slideshow with original slides and audio) with surgical and gastroenterological contents by standardized questionnaire. Questions concerning personal background such as educational status and experience with computers, e-mail and the internet on one hand and the CD-ROM itself concerning content, relevance for daily clinical work and continuing medical education as well as the quality of the application on the other hand, were evaluated using marks (1 = best, 6 = worst). A total of 320 physicians participated in the first part of the interview. Of these, 93% were equipped with computers in hospital as well as privately. The Internet was used by 90% of them. The majority declined a full text presentation as well as the application of scroll fields. The participants rather favored the integration of text, pictures, animations and videos. Furthermore, 95% demanded the provision on the internet. Thirty-seven colleagues in their 5th (1-11) year of training were interviewed, and of those, 27 were working in a surgical department and 10 in a medical department. Individual computer knowledge was rated with a median of 3. This revealed that 60% were equipped with computers in hospital as well as at home, the remaining 40% had computers either in hospital or at home. All participants used the internet. In total, 57% had experience with "Symposia ware". The rating of the "Symposia ware" itself was positive. Relevance and applicability of a slideshow for imparting knowledge were rated with a median of 2. This showed that 81% would buy the CD-ROM in principle, and 89% would spent up to 50 EUR. Quality, language, content and user-friendliness were all rated 2. Physicians frequently use computers and the internet. All this indicates a high degree of acceptance of electronic teaching/learning modules in medical education. A uniform structure of contents as well as a platform-independent, web-based presentation is appreciated. To enhance illustration, a picture and video-oriented visualization should be chosen. Overall, "symposia ware" is rated positively. It should cost no more than 50 EUR and it represents a valuable source of information for physicians.

AB - The continual development of the internet has supported the spread of surgical knowledge by electronic means. High quality products have to be offered from a software as well as a contents point of view. The question as to whether these new media and their contents have a real value for efficient and motivating use in medical education needed to be answered by first assessing a quality profile for the development of surgical educational modules which were then evaluated on the basis of so-called "symposia ware". First, the reactions and opinions of physicians at 47 universities were assessed by a standardized questionnaire concerning their demands on multimedia teaching/learning modules. Several different aspects of technique, content, presentation, didactics and background knowledge were analyzed. In a second step, their opinions were evaluated concerning two applications (symposia implemented on CD-ROM as a slideshow with original slides and audio) with surgical and gastroenterological contents by standardized questionnaire. Questions concerning personal background such as educational status and experience with computers, e-mail and the internet on one hand and the CD-ROM itself concerning content, relevance for daily clinical work and continuing medical education as well as the quality of the application on the other hand, were evaluated using marks (1 = best, 6 = worst). A total of 320 physicians participated in the first part of the interview. Of these, 93% were equipped with computers in hospital as well as privately. The Internet was used by 90% of them. The majority declined a full text presentation as well as the application of scroll fields. The participants rather favored the integration of text, pictures, animations and videos. Furthermore, 95% demanded the provision on the internet. Thirty-seven colleagues in their 5th (1-11) year of training were interviewed, and of those, 27 were working in a surgical department and 10 in a medical department. Individual computer knowledge was rated with a median of 3. This revealed that 60% were equipped with computers in hospital as well as at home, the remaining 40% had computers either in hospital or at home. All participants used the internet. In total, 57% had experience with "Symposia ware". The rating of the "Symposia ware" itself was positive. Relevance and applicability of a slideshow for imparting knowledge were rated with a median of 2. This showed that 81% would buy the CD-ROM in principle, and 89% would spent up to 50 EUR. Quality, language, content and user-friendliness were all rated 2. Physicians frequently use computers and the internet. All this indicates a high degree of acceptance of electronic teaching/learning modules in medical education. A uniform structure of contents as well as a platform-independent, web-based presentation is appreciated. To enhance illustration, a picture and video-oriented visualization should be chosen. Overall, "symposia ware" is rated positively. It should cost no more than 50 EUR and it represents a valuable source of information for physicians.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 73

SP - 508

EP - 513

JO - CHIRURG

JF - CHIRURG

SN - 0009-4722

IS - 5

M1 - 5

ER -