Using office hour appointment data to illustrate a decline in student-faculty interaction during and after COVID-19.

IF 1.7 4区 教育学 Q2 EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES Advances in Physiology Education Pub Date : 2024-09-01 DOI:10.1152/advan.00036.2024
Briana Fahey, Stephen Boddy
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Abstract

Student-faculty interaction (SFI) is an important indicator of student engagement that positively associates with academic achievement and retention. Quantitative information regarding the impact of emergency remote teaching (ERT) during COVID-19 on SFI is limited. This retrospective, observational cohort study tests the hypothesis that COVID-19 ERT negatively affected SFI in a gender-dependent manner. Electronic records of office hour (OH) appointments, used to measure SFI, for first-year medical students across three time periods, before, during and after COVID, were obtained and analyzed. A concerning, marked decline in SFI during and after the COVID-19 pandemic is noted. Before COVID, significantly more women (75.20%) made at least one OH appointment compared with men (40.54%). During COVID, the proportion of women making an OH appointment (69.71%) was statistically indistinguishable from women before COVID-19. In contrast, significantly fewer men during COVID (10.34%) than before COVID made an OH appointment. On return to face-to-face teaching, no rebound effect was observed. Compared with before COVID gender-matched peers, fewer men and women after COVID made OH appointments. Discipline-based analyses show that for all three time periods physiology emerged as the content area in which students made most OH appointments. The reduction in SFI observed, combined with the consistency with which the participants in our study indicated a need for assistance with the physiology discipline, emphasizes the importance of active promotion of faculty support and deliberate efforts to reconnect with students in the post-COVID context.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Applying readily available data, we quantify a persistent, negative impact of the shift to emergency remote teaching (ERT) on a measure of student-faculty interaction (SFI) among first-year medical students. A gender-based component to these effects is also discussed. Before, during, and after COVID, physiology emerged as the most engaged-with discipline as measured by office hour (OH) appointment volume.

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利用办公时间预约数据说明 COVID-19 期间和之后师生互动的减少。
师生互动(SFI)是衡量学生参与度的一项重要指标,与学业成绩和保留率呈正相关。有关 COVID-19 期间紧急远程教学(ERT)对 SFI 影响的定量信息十分有限。这项回顾性、观察性队列研究检验了 COVID-19 紧急远程教学对 SFI 的负面影响与性别有关的假设。研究获取并分析了医科一年级学生在 COVID 之前、期间和之后三个时间段的办公时间(OH)预约电子记录,用于测量 SFI。在 COVID-19 大流行期间和之后,SFI 出现了令人担忧的明显下降。在 COVID 之前,与男性(40.54%)相比,女性(75.20%)至少预约过一次 OH。在 COVID 期间,预约职业健康检查的女性比例(69.71%)与 COVID-19 之前的女性在统计上没有区别。相比之下,在 COVID 期间(10.34%),进行 OH 预约的男性人数明显少于 COVID 之前。在恢复面对面教学后,没有观察到反弹效应。与 COVID 前性别匹配的同行相比,COVID 后进行 OH 任职的男性和女性都更少。基于学科的分析表明,在所有三个时间段内,生理学都是学生预约 OH 最多的内容领域。我们观察到的 SFI 的减少,以及我们研究中的参与者表示需要生理学学科帮助的一致性,都强调了在 COVID 后积极促进教师支持和有意识地努力与学生重新建立联系的重要性。新颖性和值得注意的是 应用现成的数据,我们量化了转为急诊远程教学(ERT)对一年级医学生师生互动(SFI)的持续负面影响。我们还讨论了这些影响中的性别因素。在 COVID 之前、期间和之后,以办公时间(OH)预约量衡量,生理学都是参与度最高的学科。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
19.00%
发文量
100
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Advances in Physiology Education promotes and disseminates educational scholarship in order to enhance teaching and learning of physiology, neuroscience and pathophysiology. The journal publishes peer-reviewed descriptions of innovations that improve teaching in the classroom and laboratory, essays on education, and review articles based on our current understanding of physiological mechanisms. Submissions that evaluate new technologies for teaching and research, and educational pedagogy, are especially welcome. The audience for the journal includes educators at all levels: K–12, undergraduate, graduate, and professional programs.
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