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Shilling, Tammy; Thayer, Jerome; Coria-Navia, Anneris; Ferguson, Heather – Teaching and Learning in Communication Sciences & Disorders, 2023
Active teaching methods are believed to facilitate higher-order thinking skills and prepare allied health students for independent clinical decision-making. This quantitative, correlational study aimed to explain the relationships between student preferences for active over traditional methods and their beliefs, the frequency and positiveness of…
Descriptors: Preferences, Active Learning, Student Attitudes, Student Experience
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Voth Schrag, Rachel J.; Mitschke, Diane; Orwig, Tracy; Kunkel, Laura – Journal of Teaching in Social Work, 2021
Interprofessional education (IPE) aims to introduce students to the importance of team-based decision making. This article presents evaluation data from an IPE poverty simulation event. The goals of the project were to increase students' understanding of the barriers faced by families in poverty, and to increase students' confidence when working…
Descriptors: Teamwork, Participative Decision Making, Interprofessional Relationship, Social Work
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Walton, Kristen L. W.; Baker, Jason C. – Bioscene: Journal of College Biology Teaching, 2009
Communication of scientific and medical information and collaborative work are important skills for students pursuing careers in health professions and other biomedical sciences. In addition, group work and active learning can increase student engagement and analytical skills. Students in our public health microbiology class were required to work…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Student Projects, Group Activities, Public Health
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Peterson, Norman K.; Custer, Rodney L. – Journal of Technology Studies, 1994
Comparison of 37 health occupations and 80 trade and industrial teachers' Myers Briggs types to those of a population of 1,438 other teachers indicated a high number of Sensing types teaching vocational subjects. Intuitive types left teaching at higher rates than Sensing types; Intuitive-Thinking types were even more likely to leave. (SK)
Descriptors: Allied Health Occupations Education, Job Satisfaction, Personality Traits, Secondary Education