Students' perceptions of effective learning experiences in dental school: a qualitative study using a critical incident technique.

Students' views of their educational experience can be an important source of information for curriculum assessment. Although quantitative methods, particularly surveys, are frequently used to gather such data, fewer studies have employed qualitative methods to examine students' dental education experiences. The purpose of this study is to explore characteristics of effective learning experiences in dental school using a qualitative method. All third-year (seventy) and fourth-year (seventy) dental students enrolled in one midwestern dental school were invited to participate. Fifty-three dental students (thirty-five male and eighteen female; thirty-two third-year and twenty-one fourth-year) were interviewed using a critical incident interview technique. Each student was asked to describe a specific, particularly effective learning incident that he or she had experienced in dental school and a specific, particularly ineffective learning incident, for comparison. Each interview was audiotaped. Students were assured that only the interviewer and one additional researcher would have access to the tapes. Data analysis resulted in identification of key themes in the data describing characteristics of effective learning experiences. The following characteristics of effective learning experiences were identified: 1) instructor characteristics (personal qualities, "checking-in" with students, and an interactive style); 2) characteristics of the learning process (focus on the "big picture," modeling and demonstrations, opportunities to apply new knowledge, high-quality feedback, focus, specificity and relevance, and peer interactions); and 3) learning environment (culture of the learning environment, technology). Common themes emerged across a wide variety of learning incidents. Although additional research is needed, the characteristics of effective learning experiences identified in this study may have implications for individual course design and for the dental school curriculum as a whole.

[1]  C. Goodacre,et al.  Recent graduates' and current dental students' evaluation of their prosthodontic curriculum. , 1993, The Journal of prosthetic dentistry.

[2]  R. Strauss,et al.  Dental students' reflections on their community-based experiences: the use of critical incidents. , 2003, Journal of dental education.

[3]  R. Croucher,et al.  The use of PBL to facilitate the development of professional attributes in second year dental students. , 2003, European journal of dental education : official journal of the Association for Dental Education in Europe.

[4]  K. Victoroff,et al.  Early clinical experience for first-year dental students. , 2004, Journal of dental education.

[5]  A. Strauss,et al.  Basics of qualitative research: Grounded theory procedures and techniques. , 1992 .

[6]  C. McMahon,et al.  Student use and perceptions of different learning aids in a problem-based learning (PBL) dentistry course. , 2003, Journal of dental education.

[7]  T. Marshall,et al.  Effectiveness of carbonated beverage education on dental students' knowledge and behavioral intent. , 2003, Journal of dental education.

[8]  R. Frankel,et al.  Toward an informal curriculum that teaches professionalism , 2004, Journal of General Internal Medicine.

[9]  D. Stiefel,et al.  Assessment of student attitude and confidence in a program of dental education in care of the disabled. , 1979, Journal of dental education.

[10]  E. B. Grimes Student perceptions of an online dental terminology course. , 2002, Journal of dental education.

[11]  H. Vroman,et al.  Innovation in Professional Education: Steps on a Journey from Teaching to Learning , 1994 .

[12]  J. C. Flanagan Psychological Bulletin THE CRITICAL INCIDENT TECHNIQUE , 2022 .

[13]  D. Kolb Experiential Learning: Experience as the Source of Learning and Development , 1983 .

[14]  Daniel L. Jones,et al.  Graduating dental students' perceptions of oral cancer education: results of an exit survey of seven dental schools. , 2002, Journal of cancer education : the official journal of the American Association for Cancer Education.

[15]  R. Komolpis,et al.  Web-based orthodontic instruction and assessment. , 2002, Journal of dental education.

[16]  M. Glick,et al.  Providing care in an infectious disease clinic. Why students volunteer. , 1998, European journal of dental education : official journal of the Association for Dental Education in Europe.

[17]  H. Ellis,et al.  Attitudes of medical and dental students to dissection , 2003, Clinical anatomy.

[18]  J. Kemppainen The critical incident technique and nursing care quality research. , 2000, Journal of advanced nursing.

[19]  B. Gerbert,et al.  Preparing dental students to recognize and respond to domestic violence: the impact of a brief tutorial. , 2004, Journal of the American Dental Association.

[20]  L. Boyd Reflections on clinical practice by first-year dental students: a qualitative study. , 2002, Journal of dental education.

[21]  J. Seeley,et al.  Development and evaluation of an interactive tobacco cessation CD-ROM educational program for dental students. , 2004, Journal of dental education.

[22]  M. Dagenais,et al.  Assessing the effectiveness of a new curriculum: Part I. , 2003, Journal of dental education.

[23]  W. Weston,et al.  Effective teaching behaviours of rural family medicine preceptors. , 1995, CMAJ : Canadian Medical Association journal = journal de l'Association medicale canadienne.

[24]  M. Inglehart,et al.  Education about treating patients with HIV infections/AIDS: the student perspective. , 2003, Journal of dental education.

[25]  A. W. Whitehead,et al.  Students' perceived importance of diversity exposure and training in dental education. , 2004, Journal of dental education.

[26]  E S Pilcher Students' evaluation of online course materials in fixed prosthodontics: a case study. , 2001, European journal of dental education : official journal of the Association for Dental Education in Europe.

[27]  B. Crabtree,et al.  Keeping up appearances: using qualitative research to enhance knowledge of dental practice. , 2003, Journal of dental education.