Teaching methods in the healthcare management major

Folia Med (Plovdiv). 2009 Jul-Sep;51(3):60-6.

Abstract

Introduction: Organisation and management are factors of paramount importance in higher education for achieving higher quality of training, better professional adaptation, and more effective career pursuance of the students.

Aim: The present study analyses the use of various teaching methods for the students in the major of Healthcare Management as they are employed in two medical universities.

Materials and methods: We conducted a detailed questionnaire survey which included the students in the Healthcare Management major in the Faculty of Public Health (FPH) at Sofia Medical University (SMU) and the Medical Faculty of Plovdiv Medical University (PMU). The students were surveyed for two consecutive academic years (2004/2005 and 2005/2006). The logical units of study were 198 students completing their baccalaureate programs in Healthcare Management: 145 (73.23+/-3.15%) in the FPH, SMU and 53 (26.77+/-3.15%) in the PMU (the greater number of students from the SMU was due to the greater number of students admitted into the Sofia Medical University). The technical units of study were the Faculty of Public Health in the Medical University in Sofia and the Medical faculty in the Medical University in Plovdiv. The survey was carried out using our own questionnaire form comprising 51 questions (open and closed), some of them allowing more than one answer. The collected sociological data were analysed using SPSS v. 13.0, and the diagrams were made using Microsoft Excel' 97. We used the alternative, non-parametric and graphic analyses to illustrate the processes and events at a level of significance P < 0.05.

Results: The most frequently used teaching method in both Medical Universities is the lecture (30.43+/-3.63% for PMU and 26.32+/-1.91% for SMU). This format of teaching is also considered to be the easiest with regard to learning the study material by 22.75+/-3.25% of the PMU graduates and 27.56+/-2.38% of the SMU graduates. The PMU students regard seminars, individual work and discussions as the format that afford the easiest way to acquire knowledge (22.16+/-3.21%, 21.56+/-3.18%, (18.56+/-3.01%, respectively). The most frequently used teaching method is the lecture; for the SMU student, it is used in 91.67+/-5.64% of all cases, while for PMU it is 8.33+/-5.64%.

Conclusion: Students prefer the classical teaching methods. They are the most familiar and the most frequently used formats by lecturers, although they do not require a higher level of activity on the part of the students, who in T. Popov's view "...demonstrate passive attitude towards the educational process".

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Bulgaria
  • Delivery of Health Care / organization & administration*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Public Health Administration / education
  • Surveys and Questionnaires
  • Teaching*
  • Young Adult