Teaching Blitz
Wednesday April 28, 2021
10:00 am
-
11:30 am
Central Time (CT)
View session on the EB Virtual Platform (EB registration required)
BEH
DPE
TOX
Chair :
Diptiman Bose
Western New England University, College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences
Mark Hernandez
Alabama College of Osteopathic Medicine
This session will: 1) showcase innovative strategies and methods for the teaching of pharmacology, physiology, biochemistry, and other biomedical science concepts and 2) briefly discuss how the teaching methods were implemented during emergency remote learning due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Speakers will present their inventive teaching practices or laboratory activities in brief interactive demonstrations followed by audience discussion. Participants will not only gain new teaching ideas but also guidance in how to implement these activities for remote learning.
NOTE: In order to utilize the full functionality of Zoom, please download or update to the latest version of Zoom.
Speakers
Kevin Tidgewell
- Duquesne University School of Pharmacy
Game of International Drug Discovery
Within an elective course for Third Year pharmacy students, I teach about the drug discovery process and international collaborations to discover natural products. To engage the students in better understanding the complex relationships between countries within this process we utilize an in-class game simulation where groups of students try to achieve preset goals in collaboration and competition with other groups. Gamification of these concepts help students better understand the complexity and motivations behind the process of natural products drug discovery.
Sarah Lerchenfeldt
- Oakland University, William Beaumont School of Medicine
Using Team-based Learning in a Virtual Environment to Enhance Decision Making in Biomedical Sciences
Students must learn that in a real-life setting, many answers to medical questions may not always be black or white, in which case there may be more than one appropriate way to address a difficult problem. Incorporating video-conferencing software with other online tools, team-based learning (TBL) can be used in a virtual environment to present complicated scenarios in pharmacology. Cases can be designed to help students at all levels, whether high school or professional students, to become more comfortable with the ambiguity they will often experience when making difficult decisions.
Sandeep Bansal
- Texas Christian Univ, Univ of North Texas Health Science Center
Clinical Vignettes as Relevant Context for Learning Biomedical Sciences
The presentation will cover how pharmacology content is presented using appropriate clinical cases. These clinical cases are used to provide an active learning educational environment for student learning. In addition, value of the instructional method using in-person and online formats will be discussed.
Ricardo Peña
- Universidad de Los Andes
Virtual Adaptation of a Metacognitive Intervention in a Biomedical Sciences Course: “Memory Clinics” in a Digital Environment
“Memory Clinics” were originally developed as memory challenges aimed at developing metacognitive skills with students in a medical pharmacology course. After positive results were obtained with a physical intervention, Memory Clinics are currently being adapted to take place in a virtual environment through the Educaplay platform, while maintaining the educational goals and general methodology of the traditional intervention.
Paiboon Jungsuwadee
- Fairleigh Dickinson University School of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Innovative Teaching for Cultural Awareness Education
Using obesity course as a model to educate individuals from different backgrounds and cultures.
Diptiman Bose
- Western New England University, College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences
Flowcharts: A Teaching and Learning Tool Designed to Integrate Biomedical Sciences with Clinical Sciences
Successful curricular integration of therapeutics with foundational science courses in pharmacy schools has long been a goal of the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education. After several years of declining student outcomes in the Acute Cardiovascular pharmacotherapeutics course, integrated flowcharts were introduced to improve student learning and course outcomes. The integrated flowcharts provide a summary of therapeutic decision making based on applying knowledge gained from the pharmacology and therapeutics content. These charts are completed by the students during class while actively discussing the "steps" with the instructors, thereby promoting classroom participation and engagement. Implementation of the use of flowcharts was also seamless during the COVID-19 pandemic semester. The class was divided into small sessions, while the instructors' used zoom/MS whiteboard® to complete the charts with synchronous delivery. An individual student or open responses from the group were solicited as the instructors completed the charts on the call using MS PowerPoint/whiteboard®. The implementation of the flowcharts has been positively favored by the students and has significantly improved overall course outcomes.