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Two Pills Tips: Peer Evaluations!

7m · Take Two Pills and listen to this podcast · 14 Mar 00:00

https://www.edsurge.com/news/2018-02-12-five-ways-to-make-peer-feedback-effective-in-your-classroom

https://www.wwu.edu/teachinghandbook/evaluation_of_learning/peer_review.shtml 

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3355282/ 

http://andrewmiesner.wp.drake.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/77/2014/06/Use-student-pharmacist-peer-feedback-during-a-journal-club-in-an-advanced-pharmacy-practice-experience.pdf 

 

Let’s talk assignments. In order to get to higher levels of learning, we need to go beyond multiple choice/true-false. However, what is the increased burden of grading?? Is there a way that we can increase application, evaluation, and synthesis without having hundreds of papers to grade?? 

 

A potential solution? peer evaluation.  

 

Peer assessment can be defined as the application of criteria and standards to evaluate and provide feedback on the work of peers or colleagues 

In a group project, peer evaluation provides accountability of all members 

We all have to give peer feedback in our careers whether providing peer review in manuscripts or presentations, reviewing policies/procedure, etc. We also have to give feedback to peers, other professionals, students, technicians/assistants, etc 

Benefits to our students include a requirement for critical thinking and going beyond just saying “great job!” with no actual feedback 

In an evaluation of peer assessment in health professions students in Belgium, they found that students tended to grade at the high end of their assessment scale with a narrow range, but found their assessment tool to be helpful in differentiating student contribution in group work 

In an Australian study, researchers found that although students tended to give their peers’ assignments higher marks than an expert, the quality of feedback was similar and students overall found it to be valuable 

Studies have looked at evaluation from students across different campuses. If have opportunity to evaluate students from a separate campus or university, would be more likely to receive unbiased feedback.  

Tips/tricks:  

Keeping the process anonymous increases students confidence and comfort in giving feedback to peers 

Have to decide written vs face to face. While face to face is valuable for learning to provide feedback in the future, students may prefer written due to the anonymity.  

Start small 

Try to do in class so they can ask you for help   

I like these general recommendations to students: good feedback should be constructive, specific, kind, justified and relevant. 

Really great appendix in a 2014 article by Miesner and colleagues (published in Currents in Pharmacy Teaching and Learning) that was given to students as a guide for feedback. Some highlights include: 

Feedback is communication from others that presents data to a person about what the others are experiencing and how this is impacting them. The purpose of giving feedback is to give a person insight that they may not see in themselves and provide them with your perception of their strengths and areas of improvement. Some guidelines for feedback—  

Full Episode Notes and Information Available at www.twopillspodcast.com

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Resources: 

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5339583/ 

https://ep.bmj.com/content/105/4/236 

 

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Oh, biostatistics. A subject that strikes fear into anyone studying for an exam that contains them, someone presenting a journal club, or even analyzing your own data for research. Today, I am going to be describing a systematic approach to biostatistics that may help you in teaching the content and help your students with application. 

 

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Resources: 

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5339583/ 

https://ep.bmj.com/content/105/4/236 

For full episode notes and more information, visit www.twopillspodcast.com

Two Pills Podcast: Increase Your Confidence (interval) Teaching Biostatistics!

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https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5339583/ 

https://ep.bmj.com/content/105/4/236 

 

Can you increase your confidence (intervals) in teaching biostatistics?! 

 

Oh, biostatistics. A subject that strikes fear into anyone studying for an exam that contains them, someone presenting a journal club, or even analyzing your own data for research. Today, I am going to be describing a systematic approach to biostatistics that may help you in teaching the content and help your students with application. 

 

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I first became interested in augmenting my teaching of biostatistics in an interprofessional setting. I was working with a medical residency and they wanted to increase the structure of their journal club/biostatistics curriculum. The milestones that I attempted to address were: 

PBLI -1: Locates, appraises, and assimilates evidence from scientific studies related to the patients’ health problems  

Level 1: Describes basic concepts in clinical epidemiology, biostatistics, and clinical reasoning Categorizes the design of a research study  

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Resources: 

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5339583/ 

https://ep.bmj.com/content/105/4/236 

For full episode notes and more information, visit www.twopillspodcast.com

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Students are (generally) VERY comfortable creating videos-Snapchat, TikTok, Reels, etc 

 

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For full episode notes and resources visit us at www.twopillspodcast.com

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Having students create short, video content for online learning can increase STEM self‐efficacy (Campbell et al., 2020), and thus, making student content part of the course can be beneficial. 

 

Students are (generally) VERY comfortable creating videos-Snapchat, TikTok, Reels, etc 

 

Assign via link, immediately asks student to record, goes into folder you design for this assignment, student lists their unique link as answer to quiz 

 

Practice, edit, assign short videos 

 

Many different options-students can even set up a zoom meeting by themselves (I often do this so that I can have a creative virtual background), for informal, can just record on their phone and upload...

For full episode notes and resources visit us at www.twopillspodcast.com

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