Virtual Patients in a Behavioral Medicine Massive Open Online Course (MOOC): A Case-Based Analysis of Technical Capacity and User Navigation Pathways

BackgroundMassive open online courses (MOOCs) have been criticized for focusing on presentation of short video clip lectures and asking theoretical multiple-choice questions. A potential way of vitalizing these educational activities in the health sciences is to introduce vir...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kononowicz, Andrzej A, Berman, Anne H, Stathakarou, Natalia, McGrath, Cormac, Bartyński, Tomasz, Nowakowski, Piotr, Malawski, Maciej, Zary, Nabil
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2015-09-01
Series:JMIR Medical Education
Online Access:http://mededu.jmir.org/2015/2/e8/
id doaj-9b51834cd8cc47a08223531c631d57c8
record_format Article
spelling doaj-9b51834cd8cc47a08223531c631d57c82021-04-02T18:39:58ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR Medical Education2369-37622015-09-0112e810.2196/mededu.4394Virtual Patients in a Behavioral Medicine Massive Open Online Course (MOOC): A Case-Based Analysis of Technical Capacity and User Navigation PathwaysKononowicz, Andrzej ABerman, Anne HStathakarou, NataliaMcGrath, CormacBartyński, TomaszNowakowski, PiotrMalawski, MaciejZary, Nabil BackgroundMassive open online courses (MOOCs) have been criticized for focusing on presentation of short video clip lectures and asking theoretical multiple-choice questions. A potential way of vitalizing these educational activities in the health sciences is to introduce virtual patients. Experiences from such extensions in MOOCs have not previously been reported in the literature. ObjectiveThis study analyzes technical challenges and solutions for offering virtual patients in health-related MOOCs and describes patterns of virtual patient use in one such course. Our aims are to reduce the technical uncertainty related to these extensions, point to aspects that could be optimized for a better learner experience, and raise prospective research questions by describing indicators of virtual patient use on a massive scale. MethodsThe Behavioral Medicine MOOC was offered by Karolinska Institutet, a medical university, on the EdX platform in the autumn of 2014. Course content was enhanced by two virtual patient scenarios presented in the OpenLabyrinth system and hosted on the VPH-Share cloud infrastructure. We analyzed web server and session logs and a participant satisfaction survey. Navigation pathways were summarized using a visual analytics tool developed for the purpose of this study. ResultsThe number of course enrollments reached 19,236. At the official closing date, 2317 participants (12.1% of total enrollment) had declared completing the first virtual patient assignment and 1640 (8.5%) participants confirmed completion of the second virtual patient assignment. Peak activity involved 359 user sessions per day. The OpenLabyrinth system, deployed on four virtual servers, coped well with the workload. Participant survey respondents (n=479) regarded the activity as a helpful exercise in the course (83.1%). Technical challenges reported involved poor or restricted access to videos in certain areas of the world and occasional problems with lost sessions. The visual analyses of user pathways display the parts of virtual patient scenarios that elicited less interest and may have been perceived as nonchallenging options. Analyzing the user navigation pathways allowed us to detect indications of both surface and deep approaches to the content material among the MOOC participants. ConclusionsThis study reported on first inclusion of virtual patients in a MOOC. It adds to the body of knowledge by demonstrating how a biomedical cloud provider service can ensure technical capacity and flexible design of a virtual patient platform on a massive scale. The study also presents a new way of analyzing the use of branched virtual patients by visualization of user navigation pathways. Suggestions are offered on improvements to the design of virtual patients in MOOCs.http://mededu.jmir.org/2015/2/e8/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kononowicz, Andrzej A
Berman, Anne H
Stathakarou, Natalia
McGrath, Cormac
Bartyński, Tomasz
Nowakowski, Piotr
Malawski, Maciej
Zary, Nabil
spellingShingle Kononowicz, Andrzej A
Berman, Anne H
Stathakarou, Natalia
McGrath, Cormac
Bartyński, Tomasz
Nowakowski, Piotr
Malawski, Maciej
Zary, Nabil
Virtual Patients in a Behavioral Medicine Massive Open Online Course (MOOC): A Case-Based Analysis of Technical Capacity and User Navigation Pathways
JMIR Medical Education
author_facet Kononowicz, Andrzej A
Berman, Anne H
Stathakarou, Natalia
McGrath, Cormac
Bartyński, Tomasz
Nowakowski, Piotr
Malawski, Maciej
Zary, Nabil
author_sort Kononowicz, Andrzej A
title Virtual Patients in a Behavioral Medicine Massive Open Online Course (MOOC): A Case-Based Analysis of Technical Capacity and User Navigation Pathways
title_short Virtual Patients in a Behavioral Medicine Massive Open Online Course (MOOC): A Case-Based Analysis of Technical Capacity and User Navigation Pathways
title_full Virtual Patients in a Behavioral Medicine Massive Open Online Course (MOOC): A Case-Based Analysis of Technical Capacity and User Navigation Pathways
title_fullStr Virtual Patients in a Behavioral Medicine Massive Open Online Course (MOOC): A Case-Based Analysis of Technical Capacity and User Navigation Pathways
title_full_unstemmed Virtual Patients in a Behavioral Medicine Massive Open Online Course (MOOC): A Case-Based Analysis of Technical Capacity and User Navigation Pathways
title_sort virtual patients in a behavioral medicine massive open online course (mooc): a case-based analysis of technical capacity and user navigation pathways
publisher JMIR Publications
series JMIR Medical Education
issn 2369-3762
publishDate 2015-09-01
description BackgroundMassive open online courses (MOOCs) have been criticized for focusing on presentation of short video clip lectures and asking theoretical multiple-choice questions. A potential way of vitalizing these educational activities in the health sciences is to introduce virtual patients. Experiences from such extensions in MOOCs have not previously been reported in the literature. ObjectiveThis study analyzes technical challenges and solutions for offering virtual patients in health-related MOOCs and describes patterns of virtual patient use in one such course. Our aims are to reduce the technical uncertainty related to these extensions, point to aspects that could be optimized for a better learner experience, and raise prospective research questions by describing indicators of virtual patient use on a massive scale. MethodsThe Behavioral Medicine MOOC was offered by Karolinska Institutet, a medical university, on the EdX platform in the autumn of 2014. Course content was enhanced by two virtual patient scenarios presented in the OpenLabyrinth system and hosted on the VPH-Share cloud infrastructure. We analyzed web server and session logs and a participant satisfaction survey. Navigation pathways were summarized using a visual analytics tool developed for the purpose of this study. ResultsThe number of course enrollments reached 19,236. At the official closing date, 2317 participants (12.1% of total enrollment) had declared completing the first virtual patient assignment and 1640 (8.5%) participants confirmed completion of the second virtual patient assignment. Peak activity involved 359 user sessions per day. The OpenLabyrinth system, deployed on four virtual servers, coped well with the workload. Participant survey respondents (n=479) regarded the activity as a helpful exercise in the course (83.1%). Technical challenges reported involved poor or restricted access to videos in certain areas of the world and occasional problems with lost sessions. The visual analyses of user pathways display the parts of virtual patient scenarios that elicited less interest and may have been perceived as nonchallenging options. Analyzing the user navigation pathways allowed us to detect indications of both surface and deep approaches to the content material among the MOOC participants. ConclusionsThis study reported on first inclusion of virtual patients in a MOOC. It adds to the body of knowledge by demonstrating how a biomedical cloud provider service can ensure technical capacity and flexible design of a virtual patient platform on a massive scale. The study also presents a new way of analyzing the use of branched virtual patients by visualization of user navigation pathways. Suggestions are offered on improvements to the design of virtual patients in MOOCs.
url http://mededu.jmir.org/2015/2/e8/
work_keys_str_mv AT kononowiczandrzeja virtualpatientsinabehavioralmedicinemassiveopenonlinecoursemoocacasebasedanalysisoftechnicalcapacityandusernavigationpathways
AT bermananneh virtualpatientsinabehavioralmedicinemassiveopenonlinecoursemoocacasebasedanalysisoftechnicalcapacityandusernavigationpathways
AT stathakarounatalia virtualpatientsinabehavioralmedicinemassiveopenonlinecoursemoocacasebasedanalysisoftechnicalcapacityandusernavigationpathways
AT mcgrathcormac virtualpatientsinabehavioralmedicinemassiveopenonlinecoursemoocacasebasedanalysisoftechnicalcapacityandusernavigationpathways
AT bartynskitomasz virtualpatientsinabehavioralmedicinemassiveopenonlinecoursemoocacasebasedanalysisoftechnicalcapacityandusernavigationpathways
AT nowakowskipiotr virtualpatientsinabehavioralmedicinemassiveopenonlinecoursemoocacasebasedanalysisoftechnicalcapacityandusernavigationpathways
AT malawskimaciej virtualpatientsinabehavioralmedicinemassiveopenonlinecoursemoocacasebasedanalysisoftechnicalcapacityandusernavigationpathways
AT zarynabil virtualpatientsinabehavioralmedicinemassiveopenonlinecoursemoocacasebasedanalysisoftechnicalcapacityandusernavigationpathways
_version_ 1721551424604602368