Newsroom   news briefs  |  news features
Advertisement
Ohi med students leverage technology for a better 'cram'
The problem with higher learning is that it takes so long... unless you're a med student at Ohio State, in which case you can get a 50-minute lecture crammed into a 30 minute podcast.
Posted March 08, 2010
By SHAUN CONLIN, EVERGEEK MEDIA
 
According to the Ohio State University Medical Center, the typical third-year medical student will have attended more than 2,000 hours of classroom lectures upon graduation and dedicated more than two-thirds of his or her waking hours to medical school.

Such time-management demands led student Justin Harper to develop a tool that condenses the typical 50-minute lecture into a 30-minute podcast, a process that speeds up lectures, compresses them and edits out pauses, extraneous noise and related hubbub.

"I am able to listen to several lectures in the same amount of time it would take to sit through one," said Harper. "I can read [and] do research, using my own timetable," he added.

In an effort to improve the quality of education and patient care, Ohio State's medical students have been using the Apple iPod Touch since 2007 to assist with their academic and clinical activities. Each student receives a device equipped with medical software programs developed by faculty at Ohio State's College of Medicine.

Typically, the Apple media players are used for music, movies and games. However, according to Dr. Catherine Lucey, vice dean for education at Ohio State's College of Medicine, the devices have become essential in the learning process for new doctors as well.

iPod Touch equipped, medical students are answering patient questions with instant access to the most recent journal articles and medical literature, bedside. Additionally, patients can view videos of surgical procedures and medical treatments and know what to expect, lessening the fear of the unknown.

Moreover, the availability of medical applications such as histology, pharmacology and neuroanatomy has increased tremendously. "Going forward, we are collaborating with our colleagues at Ohio State's College of Engineering and other companies to develop applications that will supplement the techniques we teach," said Lucey.
 
 
Twitter Slashdot

JustAnswer.com


User Comments
Also included in Nokia's application are walk and drive navigation, turn-by-turn voice guidance with lane assistance, plus traffic information in 10 of the supported countries including the US and Canada. The real kicker: Nokia's Ovi Maps solution works offline, no need for a continuing and often costly data plan.
mbt shoes usa  |  #  |  Jun. 29, 2010  
 

Name *
Email Address * (Not Displayed or Shared)
Website URL (Optional)
Comment *


NOTE: Profanity, hate, and stupidity not tolerated, abusers banned
HTML not permitted, [b] Bold [/b] and [i] Italic [/i] okay

Please add 2 and 7 and type the answer here: