The University of British Columbia
UBC - A Place of Mind
The University of British Columbia Vancouver campus
Institute for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (ISoTL)
  • Home
  • About
    • What is SoTL?
    • ISoTL Background
    • People
    • Membership
    • Contact
  • Services
    • SoTL Linkage Grants
    • SoTL Seed Program
    • SoTL Dissemination Fund
  • Events
    • Upcoming Workshops
    • Past Events
    • Celebrate SoTL
  • Resources
    • SoTL Literature
    • How-to Guides
    • ISoTL Newsletter
  • Scholarly Outputs
    • Publication Submission
  • ISoTL Press
  • ctlt.ubc.ca
Home / 2021 / January / 04 / Feedback as a pedagogical tool in the case based learning curriculum at UBC: Is it working?

Feedback as a pedagogical tool in the case based learning curriculum at UBC: Is it working?

January 4, 2021

Project Investigator(s): Olusegun Oyedele, Associate Professor of Teaching,  Southern Medical Program, UBC Okanagan

Project Description

Tutor feedback is central to student evaluation in the case based learning (CBL) curriculum within the Medical Undergraduate Program (MDUP) of UBC Faculty of Medicine. Tutors assess students for demonstrating skills such as communication of medical information, participation in a medical team and
clinical decision making, among others, within a group setting. There is anecdotal evidence of wide variation in the quality and effectiveness of feedback that students receive, but to our knowledge, the variability, effectiveness and factors affecting implementation of tutor feedback has not been systematically studied. This project aims to study tutor feedback in the UBC MDUP by investigating how feedback is delivered, and whether current implementation of tutor feedback within the CBL curriculum effectively meets its enunciated goals
.

Research Questions

1. In the perception of medical students, how effective to their learning is the tutor feedback that they receive during CBL?

2. In the perception of tutors, how effective to students’ learning is the feedback that they give during CBL?

3. What alignment exists between the stated goals of CBL tutor feedback and its implementation, in the perception of medical students and tutors?

Impact on teaching and learning at UBC

Case based learning is still a pedagogy in evolution. Its dynamics, the role of the tutor within CBL, its effectiveness as a teaching and learning method and its many other aspects are being actively investigated. This project potentially contributes to this growing body of knowledge. Specifically at UBC, the effectiveness of CBL tutor feedback, which is a foundational pillar of this pedagogy is yet to be systematically studied. This project potentially fills this gap.

Posted in Awarded Projects
Tagged with Community-Based Engagement, First Year Experience

  • Previous
  • Next
Institute for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning
Vancouver Campus
Irving K. Barber Learning Centre
214-1961 East Mall
Vancouver, BC Canada V6T 1Z1
Email ctlt.isotl@ubc.ca
Back to top
The University of British Columbia
  • Emergency Procedures |
  • Terms of Use |
  • Copyright |
  • Accessibility