Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
Search in posts
Search in pages
Filter by Categories
15th National Conference of the IAOMFP, Chennai, 2006
Abstract
Abstracts from current literature
Acne in India: Guidelines for management - IAA Consensus Document
Addendum
Announcement
Art & Psychiatry
Article
Articles
Association Activities
Association Notes
Award Article
Book Review
Brief Report
Case Analysis
Case Letter
Case Letters
Case Notes
Case Report
Case Reports
Clinical and Laboratory Investigations
Clinical Article
Clinical Studies
Clinical Study
Commentary
Conference Oration
Conference Summary
Continuing Medical Education
Correspondence
Corrigendum
Cosmetic Dermatology
Cosmetology
Current Best Evidence
Current Issue
Current View
Derma Quest
Dermato Surgery
Dermatopathology
Dermatosurgery Specials
Dispensing Pearl
Do you know?
Drug Dialogues
e-IJDVL
Editor Speaks
Editorial
Editorial Remarks
Editorial Report
Editorial Report - 2007
Editorial report for 2004-2005
Errata
Erratum
Focus
Fourth All India Conference Programme
From Our Book Shelf
From the Desk of Chief Editor
General
Get Set for Net
Get set for the net
Guest Article
Guest Editorial
History
How I Manage?
IADVL Announcement
IADVL Announcements
IJDVL Awards
IJDVL AWARDS 2015
IJDVL Awards 2018
IJDVL Awards 2019
IJDVL Awards 2020
IJDVL International Awards 2018
Images in Clinical Practice
In Memorium
Inaugural Address
Index
Knowledge From World Contemporaries
Leprosy Section
Letter in Response to Previous Publication
Letter to Editor
Letter to the Editor
Letter to the Editor - Case Letter
Letter to the Editor - Letter in Response to Published Article
LETTER TO THE EDITOR - LETTERS IN RESPONSE TO PUBLISHED ARTICLES
Letter to the Editor - Observation Letter
Letter to the Editor - Study Letter
Letter to the Editor - Therapy Letter
Letter to the Editor: Articles in Response to Previously Published Articles
Letters in Response to Previous Publication
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the Editor - Letter in Response to Previously Published Articles
Letters to the Editor: Case Letters
Letters to the Editor: Letters in Response to Previously Published Articles
Medicolegal Window
Messages
Miscellaneous Letter
Musings
Net Case
Net case report
Net Image
Net Images
Net Letter
Net Quiz
Net Study
New Preparations
News
News & Views
Obituary
Observation Letter
Observation Letters
Oration
Original Article
ORIGINAL CONTRIBUTION
Original Contributions
Pattern of Skin Diseases
Pearls
Pediatric Dermatology
Pediatric Rounds
Perspective
Presedential Address
Presidential Address
Presidents Remarks
Quiz
Recommendations
Regret
Report
Report of chief editor
Report of Hon : Treasurer IADVL
Report of Hon. General Secretary IADVL
Research Methdology
Research Methodology
Resident page
Resident's Page
Resident’s Page
Residents' Corner
Residents' Corner
Residents' Page
Retraction
Review
Review Article
Review Articles
Reviewers 2022
Revision Corner
Self Assessment Programme
SEMINAR
Seminar: Chronic Arsenicosis in India
Seminar: HIV Infection
Short Communication
Short Communications
Short Report
Snippets
Special Article
Specialty Interface
Studies
Study Letter
Study Letters
Supplement-Photoprotection
Supplement-Psoriasis
Symposium - Contact Dermatitis
Symposium - Lasers
Symposium - Pediatric Dermatoses
Symposium - Psoriasis
Symposium - Vesicobullous Disorders
SYMPOSIUM - VITILIGO
Symposium Aesthetic Surgery
Symposium Dermatopathology
Symposium-Hair Disorders
Symposium-Nails Part I
Symposium-Nails-Part II
Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses
Systematic Reviews and Meta-analysis
Tables
Technology
Therapeutic Guideline-IADVL
Therapeutic Guidelines
Therapeutic Guidelines - IADVL
Therapeutics
Therapy
Therapy Letter
Therapy Letters
View Point
Viewpoint
What’s new in Dermatology
Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
Search in posts
Search in pages
Filter by Categories
15th National Conference of the IAOMFP, Chennai, 2006
Abstract
Abstracts from current literature
Acne in India: Guidelines for management - IAA Consensus Document
Addendum
Announcement
Art & Psychiatry
Article
Articles
Association Activities
Association Notes
Award Article
Book Review
Brief Report
Case Analysis
Case Letter
Case Letters
Case Notes
Case Report
Case Reports
Clinical and Laboratory Investigations
Clinical Article
Clinical Studies
Clinical Study
Commentary
Conference Oration
Conference Summary
Continuing Medical Education
Correspondence
Corrigendum
Cosmetic Dermatology
Cosmetology
Current Best Evidence
Current Issue
Current View
Derma Quest
Dermato Surgery
Dermatopathology
Dermatosurgery Specials
Dispensing Pearl
Do you know?
Drug Dialogues
e-IJDVL
Editor Speaks
Editorial
Editorial Remarks
Editorial Report
Editorial Report - 2007
Editorial report for 2004-2005
Errata
Erratum
Focus
Fourth All India Conference Programme
From Our Book Shelf
From the Desk of Chief Editor
General
Get Set for Net
Get set for the net
Guest Article
Guest Editorial
History
How I Manage?
IADVL Announcement
IADVL Announcements
IJDVL Awards
IJDVL AWARDS 2015
IJDVL Awards 2018
IJDVL Awards 2019
IJDVL Awards 2020
IJDVL International Awards 2018
Images in Clinical Practice
In Memorium
Inaugural Address
Index
Knowledge From World Contemporaries
Leprosy Section
Letter in Response to Previous Publication
Letter to Editor
Letter to the Editor
Letter to the Editor - Case Letter
Letter to the Editor - Letter in Response to Published Article
LETTER TO THE EDITOR - LETTERS IN RESPONSE TO PUBLISHED ARTICLES
Letter to the Editor - Observation Letter
Letter to the Editor - Study Letter
Letter to the Editor - Therapy Letter
Letter to the Editor: Articles in Response to Previously Published Articles
Letters in Response to Previous Publication
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the Editor - Letter in Response to Previously Published Articles
Letters to the Editor: Case Letters
Letters to the Editor: Letters in Response to Previously Published Articles
Medicolegal Window
Messages
Miscellaneous Letter
Musings
Net Case
Net case report
Net Image
Net Images
Net Letter
Net Quiz
Net Study
New Preparations
News
News & Views
Obituary
Observation Letter
Observation Letters
Oration
Original Article
ORIGINAL CONTRIBUTION
Original Contributions
Pattern of Skin Diseases
Pearls
Pediatric Dermatology
Pediatric Rounds
Perspective
Presedential Address
Presidential Address
Presidents Remarks
Quiz
Recommendations
Regret
Report
Report of chief editor
Report of Hon : Treasurer IADVL
Report of Hon. General Secretary IADVL
Research Methdology
Research Methodology
Resident page
Resident's Page
Resident’s Page
Residents' Corner
Residents' Corner
Residents' Page
Retraction
Review
Review Article
Review Articles
Reviewers 2022
Revision Corner
Self Assessment Programme
SEMINAR
Seminar: Chronic Arsenicosis in India
Seminar: HIV Infection
Short Communication
Short Communications
Short Report
Snippets
Special Article
Specialty Interface
Studies
Study Letter
Study Letters
Supplement-Photoprotection
Supplement-Psoriasis
Symposium - Contact Dermatitis
Symposium - Lasers
Symposium - Pediatric Dermatoses
Symposium - Psoriasis
Symposium - Vesicobullous Disorders
SYMPOSIUM - VITILIGO
Symposium Aesthetic Surgery
Symposium Dermatopathology
Symposium-Hair Disorders
Symposium-Nails Part I
Symposium-Nails-Part II
Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses
Systematic Reviews and Meta-analysis
Tables
Technology
Therapeutic Guideline-IADVL
Therapeutic Guidelines
Therapeutic Guidelines - IADVL
Therapeutics
Therapy
Therapy Letter
Therapy Letters
View Point
Viewpoint
What’s new in Dermatology
View/Download PDF

Translate this page into:

Miscellaneous Letter
90 (
3
); 382-384
doi:
10.25259/IJDVL_1172_2022
pmid:
38031676

Traditional versus e-learning during COVID-19 pandemic: An online survey on dermatology postgraduate teaching

Department of Dermatology, AIIMS, New Delhi, India
Department of Dermatology, Amrita Hospital, Faridabad, Haryana, India
Corresponding author: Dr. Neena Khanna, Department of Dermatology, Amrita Hospital, Faridabad, Haryana, India. neena_aiims@yahoo.co.in
Licence
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-Share Alike 4.0 License, which allows others to remix, transform, and build upon the work non-commercially, as long as the author is credited and the new creations are licensed under the identical terms.

How to cite this article: Swarnkar B, Sharma A, Gupta V, Ramam M, Khanna N. Traditional versus e-learning during COVID-19 pandemic: An online survey on dermatology postgraduate teaching. Indian J Dermatol Venereol Leprol. 2024;90:382-4. doi: 10.25259/IJDVL_1172_2022

Dear Editor,

Like many other teaching institutes worldwide, we were suddenly forced to shift to an online training programme during the early part of the novel coronavirus-19 (COVID-19) disease pandemic. Our dermatology postgraduate teaching programme comprises a weekly seminar, journal club, clinical case discussion, spotters, dermatopathology discussion and lectures, which were conducted virtually via the Google Meet platform during the COVID-19 pandemic. We undertook a survey after more than a year of online teaching in our department at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi, to gain better insight into both modes of learning; traditional and the new e-learning. After approval from the institute ethics committee, a Google form (https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1K-SEr5KA1F0OOhB4OgPsJe3t79ge7s4FSyEwUL1Nmag/edit#responses) was emailed to our residents (n = 33) and faculty members (n = 10) and their responses were recorded anonymously. The Google form comprised 18 questions from a previously validated questionnaire,1 and another 18 questions, specific to our teaching programme, were developed by us.

Thirty-five of the 43 (81.3%) eligible participants: 21 (60%) postgraduates (7 first-year, 6 second-year and 8 final-year), 8 (22.9%) senior-residents and 6 (17.1%) faculty filled out the questionnaire. As compared to online teaching, respondents felt more attentive during traditional physical classroom teaching, believed it to be more efficient in encouraging them to learn by themselves and were better satisfied with it in meeting their educational needs. On the other hand, respondents were more comfortable raising queries in online classes. Time utilisation was considered better in online classes by more respondents (n = 17, 48.6% vs n = 11, 31.4%), while the audio-visual experience was considered better in physical classes (n = 22, 62.9% vs n = 8, 22.9%). Overall, traditional teaching was preferred for all teaching activities, except journal clubs and seminars, where both methods were preferred similarly [Figure 1]. Table 1 summarises the responses to the validated questionnaire.

Figure 1:
Preferred teaching method for various academic activities in the dermatology curriculum (n = number of respondents out of 35).
Table 1: Responses to the validated questionnaire
Question Respondents with a response category >=4 on Likert scale*
p-value
Online teaching (%) Traditional teaching (%)
How convenient was it for you to attend academic sessions using both modes of teaching? 25 (71.4%) 18 (51.4%) 0.08
How attentive were you during the sessions? 5 (14.3%) 14 (40%) 0.02
How easy did you find comprehending the graphs and schematic diagrams? 21 (60%) 17 (48.6%) 0.28
How comfortable were you to raise the queries? 23 (65.7%) 13 (37.1%) 0.03
How satisfied were you with the way speakers addressed most of the queries? 23 (65.7%) 21 (60%) 0.47
How effective were the sessions in encouraging you to take an initiative to learn by yourself? 13 (37.1%) 21 (60%) 0.02
How satisfied were you with the sessions in meeting your educational needs? 16 (45.7%) 25 (71.4%) 0.02
How effective were the academic interactions to facilitate your overall learning in:
Seminars 14 (40%) 22 (62.9%) 0.04
Journal club 12 (48%) 17 (48.6%) 0.19
Clinical case discussion 5 (14.3%) 26 (74.3%) <0.001
Spotters 10 (28.6%) 30 (85.7%) <0.001
Dermatopathology 16 (45.7%) 26 (74.3%) 0.01
Lectures 11 (31.4%) 19 (54.3%) 0.02
How important are the following features of online teaching for you?
Flexibility to attend the session from wherever you are 24 (68.6%) NA
Access to video recording of the sessions facilitating learning at your own speed for a given presentation 22 (62.8%) NA
Ability to view recorded sessions more than once for revision 22 (62.8%) NA
Ability to look up information critical to understanding of the concepts during the conduct of session 20 (57.1%) NA
Accessibility to distant expertise from other departments/institutions 20 (57.1%) NA
Ability to give instant feedback on content and presentation NA 18 (51.4%)
Ability to have eye-to-eye contact and view gestures of the speaker NA 24 (68.6%)
Ability to interact in a group NA 23 (65.7%)
Ability to view the slides with respect to one's seating location NA 18 (51.4%)
1, Not at all; 2, slightly; 3, moderately; 4, quite; 5, extremely

NA, not applicable

Among the responses to the questions specific to our programme, more respondents reported less anxiety while speaking during online classes (n = 21, 60% vs. n = 5, 14%), but picked traditional method for developing public speaking skills and confidence (n = 27, 77% vs n = 1, 3%). More students were likely to evade a difficult question or cheat to find the answer during an online class (n = 21, 72% vs n = 1, 3%). The majority of them found it difficult to describe clinical findings in clinical case presentations in online sessions (n = 12, 34.3% vs n = 2, 5.7%) while it was more difficult to respond to a direct question in traditional teaching sessions (n = 11, 31.4% vs n = 4, 11.4%). More respondents reported being distracted during online sessions (n = 12, 34.3% vs n = 1, 2.9%). Physical discomfort (eye strain, neck pain, etc.) during the classes was reported by only a small proportion (<=20%) for both modes. Traditional teaching was viewed as a better method of learning than online teaching to make a clinical diagnosis, be it on images (n = 14, 40% vs n = 6, 17.1%) or by examining a patient (n = 28, 80% vs n = 2, 5.7%). While attending an online class, the majority had faced a connectivity problem at some time (n = 31, 88.6%), had logged in without really attending at least once (n = 29, 83%), or faced an embarrassing situation due to the mic or video being switched on by mistake at least once (n = 25, 71.4%). When asked about their overall experience with the modes of teaching, about (n = 28) 80% of the respondents rated their experience as ‘good’ with traditional teaching as compared to (n = 19) 54% with online teaching. More faculty members and senior residents preferred online classes for the flexibility in choosing cases for discussion (n = 7/14, 50% vs n = 2/14, 14.3%), but the interaction with students was felt to be better in traditional classes (n = 10/14, 71.4% vs n = 2/14, 14.3%). Overall, a similar proportion (n = 6/14, 42.9% and n = 5/14, 35.7%) of faculty members and senior residents preferred online or physical mode, while (n = 3/14) 21.4% had no preference (Supplementary data).

Recently, Nguyen et al published the feedback of dermatology faculty and residents (n = 65) regarding their experiences of the online dermatology curriculum in the United States. The features of online teaching, such as flexibility in attendance from any place and the opportunity to learn from distant speakers, were considered important by the majority, as seen in our survey as well. The major challenges faced with online curriculum were difficulty staying engaged, less spontaneous feedback and a lack of human features. Overall, a similar proportion of respondents (83% versus 76%) were satisfied with both offline and online teaching in their study.2 Another study including physiology postgraduates also found no statistically significant difference between the two modes of teaching in meeting their educational needs,1 while a study including surgery postgraduates reported that the majority favoured online teaching.3 A meta-analysis found no evidence to suggest the superiority of offline mode over online teaching for medical undergraduates.4

Our survey indicates that traditional teaching methods are preferred over online teaching, particularly for sessions like case discussions, spotters and dermatopathology slide discussions. This is an important finding, considering that dermatology is often considered a visual science where ‘looking’ is enough to make an accurate assessment. We did not find a clear preference for activities like journal club and seminars. Online classes were associated with less anxiety about public speaking and lent themselves suitably to such activities. The other important advantages include attending lectures from a remote site, access to experts from distant places and recording the lectures for watching later at a more convenient time as well as for revisions.

As the COVID-19 norms were relaxed, we shifted to a hybrid mode of teaching, with seminars and journal clubs continuing online while the rest shifted back to the traditional manner. It would appear that the right balance of both online and physical classroom teaching may be the way forward, not only in dermatology training programmes but also in other postgraduate and undergraduate programmes.

The results of our study are limited by a small sample size from a single institute. The improved technology and user comfort with online teaching post-COVID-19 pandemic may have a potential confounding effect on the survey responses.

Declaration of patient consent

Patient’s consent not required as there are no patients in this study.

Financial support and sponsorship

Nil.

Conflicts of interest

There are no conflicts of interest.

References

  1. , , . Student perceptions on synchronous virtual versus face-to-face teaching for leader-centered and participant-centered postgraduate activities during COVID-19. Adv Physiol Educ. 2021;45:554-62.
    [CrossRef] [PubMed] [PubMed Central] [Google Scholar]
  2. , , , , . Online dermatology curriculum experiences among US dermatology residents and faculty. Clin Dermatol 2022 S0738-081X(22)00106-7
    [Google Scholar]
  3. , , , , , . Utility of real-time online teaching during COVID era among surgery postgraduates. Indian J Surg 2020:1-7.
    [CrossRef] [PubMed] [PubMed Central] [Google Scholar]
  4. , . Does online learning work better than offline learning in undergraduate medical education? A systematic review and meta-analysis. Med Educ Online. 2019;24:1666538.
    [CrossRef] [PubMed] [PubMed Central] [Google Scholar]

Fulltext Views
220

PDF downloads
27
View/Download PDF
Download Citations
BibTeX
RIS
Show Sections