There has been a surge in the efforts to efficiently improve students' academic performance recently such that their depth of learning as well as their academic attainment is elevated. The identification of the needs and requirements of students is imperative for this to materialize. The classroom setting differs around the globe, with several factors affecting how teaching and learning are conducted. Versatile cognitive preferences among students also play a unique role in the way they acquire education. Active learning is a strategy that challenges the traditional teacher-centered paradigm. One such technique in active learning involves the "flipped classroom," also called "inverted classroom." The flipped classroom has been introduced as a novel educational technique in numerous areas of learning and has proven to have a more favorable influence. The concept of the flipped classroom is relatively novel in this regard. The idea and application of flipped classrooms and their effect on the academic performance of students with different cognitive styles have been studied by many researchers. Didactic lectures usually take a back seat (as supportive videos) to facilitate student learning in this format. This review aims to examine the mechanisms through which the flipped classroom approach affects the two cognitive styles: field-dependent and field-independent. The online component of the flipped classroom favors the field-independent students and helps them perform better through an in-class session as compared to the field-dependent students. The review further discusses the benefits of the flipped classroom for both field-dependent and field-independent students.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.63729 | DOI Listing |
JMIR Med Educ
January 2025
Centre for Digital Transformation of Health, University of Melbourne, Carlton, Australia.
Background: Learning health systems (LHS) have the potential to use health data in real time through rapid and continuous cycles of data interrogation, implementing insights to practice, feedback, and practice change. However, there is a lack of an appropriately skilled interprofessional informatics workforce that can leverage knowledge to design innovative solutions. Therefore, there is a need to develop tailored professional development training in digital health, to foster skilled interprofessional learning communities in the health care workforce in Australia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Med Educ
January 2025
School of Dentistry, Hainan Medical University, Haikou, 571199, PR China.
Background: Oral general course (OGC) is a basic subject of medical education. The implementation of multidisciplinary team (MDT) meets the individual needs of patients. Based on the concept of MDT, this study combined the theory and practice of flipped classroom teaching method to evaluate the teaching effect, so as to provide a basis and reference for the thinking transformation of medical students to clinicians.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Res Notes
January 2025
Department of Health Information Technology and Management, School of Allied Medical Sciences, Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran.
Objective: Glaucoma is a major cause of irreversible blindness globally. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) aids early glaucoma diagnosis. Interpreting OCT scans requires familiarity with the technology and image analysis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Teach
February 2025
Department of Pharmacology, Faculty of Medicine, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand.
Background: Teaching renal physiology is problematic in many medical schools since conventional passive learning might not be effective. Active learnings including flipped classroom (FC) have been introduced to medical education including renal physiology topic recently, but no study regarding long-term outcomes has been reported.
Approach: Two classes of second-year medical students were compared.
Dev Biol
January 2025
Willamette UniversityDepartment of Biology, 900 State St, Salem, OR 97301, United States of America.
Mammalian lactation is a dynamic process that develops throughout the lifespan of an organism. Here we present a framework for a third semester core course in biology that centers course content on lactation allowing examination of the developmental process as a dynamic whole-body experience involving changes occurring at the molecular, cellular, and organ levels of organization. Inequitable economic, socio- and geopolitical systems structure social determinants of health, affecting rates of breastfeeding in human populations.
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