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      Comparison of Internet versus lecture instructional methods for teaching nursing research.

      Journal of professional nursing : official journal of the American Association of Colleges of Nursing
      Computer-Assisted Instruction, Education, Nursing, Graduate, methods, standards, Humans, Internet, Nursing Research, education, Prospective Studies, Teaching

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          Abstract

          Although many higher education programs are using the Internet to teach classes, there are few published reports on the effectiveness of this method on test scores or student satisfaction. The purpose of this study was to compare test and student satisfaction scores of graduate nursing students who take a nursing research course via the Internet with those of students who take the same course via traditional lecture instruction. In addition, student technical support use and Internet student lecture attendance also were examined. A total of 97 students (Internet, 44; lectures, 53) participated. There were no significant differences in test scores and overall course student satisfaction (P > .05). However, the Internet students reported significantly higher (P = .04) stimulation of learning compared with the traditional lecture students. Technical support use by the Internet students was high initially and was related to software problems. Of interest were the large proportion of Internet students (73 percent) who attended at least 3 of the 10 lectures. Use of the Internet to teach graduate-level nursing research can provide comparable learning and student satisfaction to traditional lecture instructional methods.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          10860311
          10.1053/PN.2000.5919

          Chemistry
          Computer-Assisted Instruction,Education, Nursing, Graduate,methods,standards,Humans,Internet,Nursing Research,education,Prospective Studies,Teaching

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