Emergency Medicine Virtual Conference Participants’ Engagement with Competing Activities

Author:

Khamees Deena1,Kropf Charles2,Tomlinson Sarah3,Cranford James2,Carney Michele3,Harvey Carrie2,Wolff Meg3,Haas Mary2,Hopson Laura2

Affiliation:

1. University of Texas, Department of Emergency Medicine, Houston, Texas

2. University of Michigan, Department of Emergency Medicine, Ann Arbor, Michigan

3. University of Michigan, Department of Emergency Medicine and Pediatrics, Ann Arbor, Michigan

Abstract

Introduction: Residency didactic conferences transitioned to a virtual format during the COVID-19 pandemic. This format creates questions about effective educational practices, which depend on learner engagement. In this study we sought to characterize the competitive demands for learner attention during virtual didactics and to pilot methodology for future studies. Methods: This was a prospective, observational, cohort study of attendees at virtual didactics from a single emergency medicine residency, which employed a self-report strategy informed by validated classroom assessments of student engagement. We deployed an online, two-question survey polling across six conference days using random signaled sampling. Participants reported all activities during the preceding five minutes. Results: There were 1303 responses over 40 survey deployments across six nonadjacent days. Respondents were residents (63.4%); faculty (27.5%); fellows (2.3%); students (2%); and others (4.8%). Across all responses, about 85% indicated engagement in the virtual conference within the last five minutes of the polls. The average number of activities engaged in was 2.0 (standard deviation = 1.1). Additional activities included education-related (34.2%), work-related (21.1%), social (18.8%), personal (14.6%), self-care (13.4%), and entertainment (4.4%). Conclusion: Learners engage in a variety of activities during virtual didactics. Engagement appears to fluctuate temporally, which may inform teaching strategies. This information may also provide unique instructor feedback. This pilot study demonstrates methodology for future studies of conference engagement and learning outcomes.

Publisher

Western Journal of Emergency Medicine

Subject

General Medicine,Emergency Medicine

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