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Can teaching research methodology influence students' attitude toward science? Cohort study and nonrandomized trial in a single medical school (CROSBI ID 162041)

Prilog u časopisu | izvorni znanstveni rad | međunarodna recenzija

Vujaklija, Ana ; Hren, Darko ; Sambunjak, Dario ; Vodopivec, Ivana ; Ivaniš, Ana ; Marušić, Ana ; Marušić, Matko Can teaching research methodology influence students' attitude toward science? Cohort study and nonrandomized trial in a single medical school // Journal of investigative medicine, 58 (2010), 2; 282-286. doi: 10.231/JIM.0b013e3181cb42d9

Podaci o odgovornosti

Vujaklija, Ana ; Hren, Darko ; Sambunjak, Dario ; Vodopivec, Ivana ; Ivaniš, Ana ; Marušić, Ana ; Marušić, Matko

engleski

Can teaching research methodology influence students' attitude toward science? Cohort study and nonrandomized trial in a single medical school

Medical teaching aims to develop attitudes and behaviors underlying professional competence of future physicians. We investigated whether a mandatory course on scientific methodology in the second study year could affect students' attitudes toward science in medicine. In a longitudinal study, students (n = 241) enrolling in 2001-2002 academic year at a single medical school were followed up until graduation in 2006-2007. Each year, they filled out a Likert-type questionnaire of 18 statements evaluating attitude toward science. Direct influence of the course on students' attitudes was tested in a nonrandomized controlled trial with the 2006-2007 second year student cohort. Positive students' attitudes toward science increased during study years (mean [SD] score of the maximum score of 90): from 57.6 (6.0) in the first to 69.8 (10.4) in the sixth year. There was a significant trend of increase in attitudes with the years of study (cubic trend by polynomial contrasts analysis, P = 0.011). Attendance of a course on research methodology significantly increased positive attitudes (score, 67.0 [7.0] before and 70.8 [7.5] after course, P = 0.032 vs control group), regardless of grade point average. The intervention had an effect even when the influence of the initial attitude was accounted for (F1, 140 = 9.25, P = 0.003 ; analysis of covariance). The attitude changes after the course was greatest in students with low initial attitude scores (Spearman rinitial score, score difference, -0.44). Medical students have positive attitudes toward science and scientific method in medicine. Attendance of a course on research methodology had positive short-term effect on students' attitudes toward science. This positive effect should be maintained by vertical integration of the course in the medical curriculum.

moral reasoning; medical students

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Podaci o izdanju

58 (2)

2010.

282-286

objavljeno

1081-5589

10.231/JIM.0b013e3181cb42d9

Povezanost rada

Temeljne medicinske znanosti

Poveznice
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