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Repurposing existing virtual patients; an Anglo-German case study

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Warianty tytułu
Języki publikacji
EN
Abstrakty
EN
Virtual Patients (VPs) are expensive to make from scratch. An attractive solution is to take those from one institution and transfer them to another. However, is it educationally feasible to simply translate the language of a VP from one country to another? The Repurposing Existing Virtual Patients (REViP) project between St George's, University of London and the University of Heidelberg has repurposed and content-enriched existing German VPs to English language, culture and pedagogy. These VPs were then embedded, tested and evaluated as core components within the paediatrics module and then ultimately made open to the wider community for free. The project has confirmed that repurposing and enriching is an effective way to share and reuse VPs as opposed to creating from scratch. However, much care should be taken to make the VPs suitable for the educational needs of the student, in their local context. This case study explores how the project was implemented and highlights the key outputs and conclusions.
Rocznik
Strony
91--98
Opis fizyczny
Bibliogr. 16 poz., rys., wykr., zdj.
Twórcy
  • e-Learning Unit at St George's, University of London, United Kingdom
autor
  • e-Learning Unit at St George's, University of London, United Kingdom
autor
  • Centre for Virtual Patients & Children's Hospital, University of Heidelberg, Germany
Bibliografia
  • [1] Ellaway, R., Candler, C, Greene, P., and Smothers, V. (2006), An Architectural Model for MedBiquitous Virtual Patients, Baltimore, MD, MedBiquitous.
  • [2] Huang, G., Reynolds, R., Candler, C. (2007), Virtual Patient Simulation at U.S. and Canadian Medical Schools, Academic Medicine.
  • [3] PRINCE2 description on the Office of Government Commerce UK website, ONLINE, accessed on 7th February 2009. http://www.ogc.gov.uk/methods_prince_2.asp
  • [4] eViP Electronic Virtual Patients official website, ONLINE, accessed on 7th February 2009. http://www.virtualpatients. eu/
  • [5] Creative Commons official website, ONLINE accessed on 7th February 2009. http://creativecommons.org/
  • [6] MedBiquitous Consortium official website, ONLINE accessed on 7th February 2009. http://www.medbiq.org/
  • [7] Creative Commons Learn official website, ONLINE, accessed on 7th February 2009. http://learn.creativecom-mons.org/
  • [8] REViP Impossible Mission video on YouTube, ONLINE, accessed on 7th February 2009. http://www.youtube.com/ watch?v=uCZp30tQ3MM
  • [9] Jorum UK national repository official website, ONLINE, accessed on 7th February 2009. http://jorum.ac.uk/
  • [10] REViP project official website, ONLINE, accessed on 7th February 2009. http://www.elu.sgul.ac.uk/revip/
  • [11] REHASH project official website, ONLINE, accessed on 7th February 2009. http://www.elu.sgul.ac.uk/rehash/
  • [12] National Institute of Clinical Excellence official website, accessed on 7th February 2009. http://www.nice.org.uk/
  • [13] Visual Understanding Environments official website, accessed on 7th February 2009. http://vue.tufts.edu/
  • [14] MedEdPORTAL repository official website, accessed on 7th February 2009. www.aamc.org/mededportal
  • [15] CAMPUS Virtual Patient official site, accessed on 7th February 2009. www.campusvirtualpatients.com
  • [16] OpenLabyrinth Virtual Patient official download site, accessed on 7th February 2009. http://sourceforge.net/proj-ects/openlabyrinth/
Typ dokumentu
Bibliografia
Identyfikator YADDA
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