RheumMadness: Creating an Online Community of Inquiry in Rheumatology.
RheumMadness: Creating an Online Community of Inquiry in Rheumatology.
- 2023
CONCLUSION: RheumMadness created an online CoI that fostered social constructivist learning about rheumatology. Copyright This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved. METHODS: The curricular scaffold of RheumMadness was a bracket of 16 rheumatology concepts competing as "teams" in a tournament. Participants could create and review "scouting reports" about each team, listen to a RheumMadness podcast, discuss on social media, and submit a bracket predicting tournament outcomes according to perceived importance of each team. Engagement was measured with direct analytics and through self-report on a survey. The survey also assessed participants' educational experience using an adapted 34-item CoI survey, which describes the cognitive, social, and teaching presences in a learning activity. OBJECTIVE: Evaluate the educational impact of RheumMadness, an online tournament of rheumatology concepts grounded in social constructivist theory, as viewed through the Community of Inquiry (CoI) framework. RESULTS: There were 100 brackets submitted. On average, each scouting report was viewed 92 times, each podcast episode was downloaded 163 times, and there were 486 tweets about #RheumMadness from 105 users. The survey received 58/107 responses (54%). Respondent agreement with prompts related to each CoI presence was: 70.3% cognitive, 61.7% social, 84.9% teaching. Reported engagement in RheumMadness correlated strongly with overall CoI survey scores (r = 0.72, P < 0.001).
English
2151-464X
10.1002/acr.25108 [doi]
IN PROCESS -- NOT YET INDEXED
MedStar Washington Hospital Center
Medicine/Rheumatology
Journal Article
CONCLUSION: RheumMadness created an online CoI that fostered social constructivist learning about rheumatology. Copyright This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved. METHODS: The curricular scaffold of RheumMadness was a bracket of 16 rheumatology concepts competing as "teams" in a tournament. Participants could create and review "scouting reports" about each team, listen to a RheumMadness podcast, discuss on social media, and submit a bracket predicting tournament outcomes according to perceived importance of each team. Engagement was measured with direct analytics and through self-report on a survey. The survey also assessed participants' educational experience using an adapted 34-item CoI survey, which describes the cognitive, social, and teaching presences in a learning activity. OBJECTIVE: Evaluate the educational impact of RheumMadness, an online tournament of rheumatology concepts grounded in social constructivist theory, as viewed through the Community of Inquiry (CoI) framework. RESULTS: There were 100 brackets submitted. On average, each scouting report was viewed 92 times, each podcast episode was downloaded 163 times, and there were 486 tweets about #RheumMadness from 105 users. The survey received 58/107 responses (54%). Respondent agreement with prompts related to each CoI presence was: 70.3% cognitive, 61.7% social, 84.9% teaching. Reported engagement in RheumMadness correlated strongly with overall CoI survey scores (r = 0.72, P < 0.001).
English
2151-464X
10.1002/acr.25108 [doi]
IN PROCESS -- NOT YET INDEXED
MedStar Washington Hospital Center
Medicine/Rheumatology
Journal Article