Surveys to assess the attitudes of medical students about learning
- VernacularTitle:医学生の学習に対する態度と姿勢に関する調査
- Author:
Akira NAKASHIMA
;
Akiko OSADA
;
Shin ISHIHARA
;
Masatsugu OHTSUKI
;
Shuji HASHIMOTO
;
Yuichiro ONO
;
Toshikazu MATSUI
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- Keywords:
surveys;
attitudes about learning
- From:Medical Education
2010;41(6):429-434
- CountryJapan
- Language:Japanese
-
Abstract:
In the present study, surveys regarding the philosophy of learning were administered just after the entrance ceremony to all students entering the Fujita Health University School of Medicine in 2005 and then, once more, to the same students during the last term of the fourth year, so that the data could be subsequently analyzed. The 87 fourth-year students who completed the surveys were divided into 3 groups(top, middle, and bottom thirds)on the basis of their examination scores in the previous years.
1) Results of the fourth-year survey suggested that students in the middle or bottom third did not develop a "learning-centered campus lifestyle" during their 4 years of medical studies, although the first-year survey indicated that most students in all 3 thirds had desired such a lifestyle.
2) The image of a physician had changed somewhat for students in middle or bottom third but not for students in the top third.
3) Attendance rates in all years of medical study were lower for students in the bottom third than for students in the middle or top third. Moreover, the motivation to study and attend lectures showed a downward trend over time for students in the bottom third.