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This workshop effectively taught residents active teaching techniques through gamified scenarios. Participants reported high satisfaction and a commitment to incorporating new methods into their practice.

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Area of Science:

  • Medical Education
  • Adult Learning Theory

Background:

  • Residents require proficiency in diverse teaching settings.
  • The COVID-19 pandemic necessitated adaptation of traditional medical education models.
  • Active teaching methods enhance understanding and knowledge retention compared to didactic lectures.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To design and evaluate an interactive workshop for residents on active teaching techniques.
  • To provide practical skills for implementing interactive teaching in various clinical environments.
  • To foster self-directed learning and improve resident educators' efficacy.

Main Methods:

  • A gamified, small-group workshop using a flipped classroom model.
  • Participants engaged with pre-read articles on active teaching strategies.
  • Card-based scenarios ("teaching setting" and "audience") facilitated practical application of techniques to clinical topics.

Main Results:

  • High participant satisfaction reported, with 85% rating the session "highly organized."
  • 78% found the workshop effective for learning active teaching techniques.
  • 88% felt equipped to incorporate concrete techniques into future teaching; Jigsaw, Polling, and Case-based learning were most favored.

Conclusions:

  • The interactive, gamified workshop design is effective and reproducible for teaching active teaching methods to residents.
  • Participants demonstrated high satisfaction and a commitment to applying learned techniques.
  • The workshop successfully addressed the need for practical guidance in implementing interactive teaching strategies in graduate medical education.