Author:
Utunen Heini,Tokar Anna,Dancante Mafalda,Piroux Corentin
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundOpenWHO is the open-access learning platform of the World Health Organization (WHO) that provides online learning for health emergencies with essential health knowledge for emergencies. There is emphasis for courses on severe emerging diseases with epidemic and pandemic potential to help frontline health workers prevent, control and respond to infectious diseases. This research addresses the question of how the existing OpenWHO online courses on infectious disease were used in the countries of disease occurrence and how to prepare for disease X, a novel or unknown pathogen with pandemic potential.MethodsOpenWHO collects self-declared demographic data from learners among which there is data on geographical location of learners. Data in infectious disease courses use on OpenWHO was collected and examined and additionally information languages used in the outbreak locations was collected.ResultsFor most diseases in focus the online learning materials were used in countries with burden of disease. This suggests the learning material production needs to be targeted for outbreak and epidemic events.ConclusionsFindings inform the use of learning materials in disease outbreaks. Further, this use case data confirms learning providers need to add offerings in languages spoken in outbreak impacted areas.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
Reference90 articles.
1. Aung KT, Shaharom MSN, Razak RA. The development of Massive Online Course (MOOC) in traditionality taught course of emergency nursing among nursing students: a concept paper. Int J Adv Res Technol Innov. 2019;1(2):26–39.
2. Beaven T, Hauck M, Comas-Quinn A, Lewis T, de los Arcos B. MOOCs: Striking the right balance between facilitation and self-determination. J Online Learn Teach. 2014;10(1):31–43.
3. Brooks C, Craig T, Teasley S. Who You Are or What You Do: Comparing the Predictive Power of Demographics vs Activity Patterns in Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs). In: Proceedings of the Second ACM Conference on Learning. New York: Association for Computing Machinery; 2015. p. 245–8.
4. Breslow L, Pritchard D, DeBoer J, Stump G, Ho A, Seaton D. Studying learning in the worldwide classroom: research into edX’s first MOOC. Res Pract Assess. 2013;8:13–25 (https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/EJ1062850.pdf).
5. Bylieva D, Bekirogullari Z, Lobatyuk V, Nam T. Analysis of the consequences of the transition to online learning on the examples of MOOS philosophy during the COVID-19 pandemic. Human Soc Sci Rev. 2020;8(10):1083–93. https://doi.org/10.18510/hssr.2020.84103.
Cited by
3 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献