Large class sizes and often few instructors in anatomy courses make it challenging for student laboratory groups to have their questions addressed in a timely manner. Instructors are often unaware of the number of requests for assistance, as well as the order in which assistance is requested, and students often spend a long time waiting for an instructor to become available. As a result of brainstorming with some of our students, a call button system of sorts was suggested.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAs educational technology advances, it is imperative that universities responsibly and appropriately adapt new approaches to enhance teaching and learning. Over a 6-month period, veterinary students at Ross University School of Veterinary Medicine (RUSVM) spearheaded the improvement of a proprietary prototype virtual interactive three-dimensional (3D), touch screen, canine anatomy table (APEX). Eight veterinary students with a grade of 80% or higher in their anatomy courses were hired as research assistants to identify and characterize 306 virtual anatomical structures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough cadaveric dissection has historically been the cornerstone of anatomical education, it comes at the cost of some emotional, moral, safety, and environmental concerns. Computer assisted learning (CAL) programs are an increasingly common solution to these issues; however, research regarding the efficacy of high fidelity simulation is limited. The traditional first semester veterinary gross anatomy course curriculum at Ross University School of Veterinary Medicine (RUSVM) was supplemented with a web based virtual anatomy program, IVALA™ (www.
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