Wieviel Digitalisierung braucht die HNO-Lehre? Chancen und Grenzen aus Sicht von Studierenden und Lehrenden

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Abstract

Background
Digitalization has long been an integral part of students’ everyday lives and increasingly also of their medical training. It seems to be an unwritten law that “digital natives” want as much digitalization as possible. This study aims to shed more light on how students in the clinical phase of medical studies perceive the increasing digitalization of teaching and what they need for good education.

Materials and methods
This study analyzed two surveys that were conducted using an online questionnaire. On the one hand, students in the 5th–9th semesters of the medical faculty at the University of Hamburg (n = 282) were surveyed (survey 1). Another survey addressed all employees of ENT clinics in Germany (n = 175; survey 2).

Results
A total of 76 students took part in survey 1 and 123 lecturers in survey 2. The results show that both students and lecturers do not want face-to-face teaching to be completely replaced by digital formats. A total of 72.7% of students reject the possibility of teaching practical skills through digital formats. The majority of students surveyed stated that offline formats improve their concentration (61.1%), participation probability (63.9%), and motivation to learn (76.6%). In contrast, 40.2% of lecturers see digitalization as a way to reduce the workload without any relevant loss in teaching quality.

Conclusion
Digital teaching formats have a negative impact on the medical education of the students surveyed. Interaction and physical presence are needed to increase the motivation to learn. This leads to the first conclusion that students are critical of the increasing digitalization of medical studies.

Bibliographical data

Translated title of the contributionHow much digitization do ENT curricula need?: Opportunities and limits from the perspective of students and teachers
Original languageGerman
ISSN0017-6192
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 05.2024