Teaching and Learning with Videoconferencing at Regional Medical Campuses

Lessons from an Ethnographic Study

Anna MacLeod

Dalhousie University

Paula Cameron

Olga Kits

Gregory Power

Jonathan Tummons

DOI: https://doi.org/10.24926/jrmc.v2i2.1559

Keywords: regional medical campuses, undergraduate medical education, distributed medical education, technology in medical education, videoconferencing in medical education


Abstract

Distributed medical education, and instruction at regional medical campuses, is becoming more prevalent. With its focus on connecting learners in multiple environments outside of traditional classroom or clinical environments, the role of technology is central to its success. In many distributed medical education settings, videoconferencing plays a central role. Over the course of a three-year ethnographic study, we learned that videoconference technologies are more than the background for learning, but rather play a central role. We describe herein a series of practical tips for those working in the context of a videoconferenced distributed medical education program. Rather than treating videoconferencing technologies as something we can ignore, predict, or control, we hope that the tips help educators at regional medical campuses to think critically about the realities of teaching and learning in a videoconferenced distributed context.

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