Adapting a Human Physiology Teaching Laboratory to the At-Home Education Setting.
Victor OngStanley YamashiroPublished in: Biomedical engineering education (2021)
Teaching labs at the undergraduate level poses unique challenges to a school system forced online by COVID-19. We adapted physiology laboratories typically taught in-person to an online-only format, allowing students to measure personal health data alone. Students used available technology and low-cost devices for measuring respiratory and cardiovascular parameters and analyzed the data for differences in testing conditions such as posture and exertion. Students did not physically interact, which encouraged self-directed learning but disallowed peer-to-peer education. Pre-recorded data was utilized for ECG measurements, which streamlined the process but precluded the interactive act of experimentation. The use of low-cost devices empowered and encouraged students to take ownership of their health and form important connections between their own lives and theoretical physiology. Facilitating communication and TA preparedness is key to smoothly running the virtual lab. It will be important for future virtual labs to be designed to facilitate student interaction, include hands-on experimentation, and encourage personal investigation.
Keyphrases
- low cost
- high school
- healthcare
- public health
- electronic health record
- medical students
- mental health
- health information
- medical education
- big data
- coronavirus disease
- endothelial cells
- sars cov
- quality improvement
- social media
- current status
- data analysis
- risk assessment
- heart rate
- heart rate variability
- machine learning
- respiratory syndrome coronavirus