The Choice to Choose in E-Learning

This post is provided by guest blogger, Michelle Edwards, graduate student University of St. Francis, MS Training and Development program.

The article surmises that there are negligible differences between students’ mastery of course content when they can choose how they complete some tasks versus no choice. The honesty was appreciated (in one study there was an error (which was later corrected) due to a choice not being turned off. Also, instructors, educators must take into consideration that when offering student choices, it can create more work for the educators/instructors not only when creating these choices but also grading. The more positive side includes students tend to be more engaged with their learning and the group that were able to make their own choices with their eLearning scored higher on their quizzes. Admittedly, (much like the article) research is limited when evaluating effective instructional practices for online learning environments and all the things that go along with it, and as usual you can’t mention online learning experience without blaming some of the problem on the pandemic and this article was no different.

I recommend this article would be great for anyone new to creating courses that will give students the ability to choose their own eLearning direction. Anyone in research on the subject matter of course students writing papers this is a general coverage article and a relatively easy read. Although it lacks the steps in ways that one would go about offering choices for eLearning, it does give views on the pitfalls one may face when offering choices.

MacNaul, H., Garcia, R., Cividini-Motta, C., & Thacker, I. (2021). Effect of assignment choice on student academic performance in an online class. Behavior analysis in practice14(4), 1074–1078. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40617-021-00566-8   Retrieved on June 6, 2024 from: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7909734/

Management Education – the Unique Gem

This post is provided by guest blogger, Michelle Edwards, graduate student University of St. Francis, MS Training and Development program.

This article focused on changes that were implemented for students of management education and management education educators in the post COVID-19 era. The world had to pivot in 2020, and adult learning was no exception. This article explained changes that transformed learning. Management education is unique in such that the education is provided for business leaders, administrators and provides professional or expert advice. This is a specialty area of education.

This was an awesome article; this article would be beneficial for graduate students doing research for training and development programs or for instructional design program students. This is also a great article for professors who teach management education.

Ratten V. (2023). The post COVID-19 pandemic era: Changes in teaching and learning methods for management educators. The International Journal of Management Education21(2), 100777. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijme.2023.100777Links to an external site..

Is Tech Friend or Foe in Healthcare?

This post is provided by guest blogger, Michelle Edwards, graduate student University of St. Francis, MS Training and Development program.

Current and future technologies are impacting healthcare. In particular, this article focused on the computerized patient order entry (CPOE) programs. This process is used by clinicians to enter and send treatment instructions electronically through a CPOE application; previously this was done by paper. These applications were created in hopes to improve patient safety to help alleviate wrong- dosing, wrong medication, wrong route and wrong delivery.

The article explains how there remains many flaws with these applications from many programs not having the ability to recognize an incorrect entry by a clinician. (E.g.) An error in the keystroke such as future dating for a year away, there should flag that alerts the clinician requiring them to verify for things like this. The article mentioned a pharmacist set a medication start date for a year away instead of the next morning these things could not only cause a delay a care but could lead up to and include an untimely death. Alarm and alert fatigue, currently clinicians override the system alerts and although only about 10% were incorrectly overridden, when we speak in term of patient lives even 1% is too many. These errors can impact patient outcomes tremendously. 

The author mentioned AI being introduced into healthcare and how this will present challenges; AI tends to learn behaviors this could lead to the AI making decisions without the clinician being involved, as a clinician in healthcare myself this sounds so scary. I will say from the overall tone of the article technology has brought us so far but truly we have so far to go and still face many challenges that we need to explore with current technologies and the future technologies on the rise and to stay on top of these things. I will personally say that within the next 3 years there will be new jobs in healthcare that will deal with these exact issues. 

Reference

 Holmgren, J., McBride, S., Gale, B, & Mossburg, S. (2023, March 29). Technology as a tool for improving patient safety. Patient Safety Network. Retrieved from: https://psnet.ahrq.gov/perspective/technology-tool-improving-patient-safety#:~:text=Introduction,cost%20across%20all%20healthcare%20settings.