Communication skills for medical/dental students at the University of Pretoria : lessons learnt from a two-year study using a forum theatre method

Show simple item record

dc.contributor.author Kruger, Christa
dc.contributor.author Blitz-Lindeque, J.J.
dc.contributor.author Pickworth, Glynis Ellen
dc.contributor.author Munro, A.J.(Alick J.)
dc.contributor.author Lotriet, Marena
dc.date.accessioned 2008-02-13T05:46:04Z
dc.date.available 2008-02-13T05:46:04Z
dc.date.issued 2005-07
dc.description.abstract BACKGROUND: This study describes the lessons learnt from using a novel method for teaching communication skills to second-year medical/dental students. METHODS: Medical and drama teachers designed this action research project to serve the educational interests of secondyear medical/dental and drama students. The drama students enacted problematic doctor-patient scenarios for their forum theatre course. The interactive enactment was done for groups of 60-70 medical/dental students. The latter interrupted the actors to suggest improved communication skills. The drama students then re-enacted the scenarios, incorporating the improvements. The medical/dental students’ knowledge of communication skills was assessed before the enactment, three weeks later, and again four months after that. Their semi-structured feedback was analysed thematically. In the next year, the feedback was used to improve the methodology for the new second-year students. RESULTS: In both years, the medical/dental students’ knowledge showed a statistically significant improvement after the enactment, and this was sustained for four months. In year 1, the feedback revolved around language problems and disrespectful attitudes. In year 2, visual cue cards of the communication skills were displayed during the act, and the drama students emphasised these rather than attitudinal problems. However, feedback showed that caricaturing the doctors’ attitudes still detracted attention from the desired focus on communication skills. CONCLUSIONS: Although the forum theatre method can transfer knowledge of communication skills, the focus of the acting should be on the demonstration of inappropriate communication skills rather than inappropriate attitudes. One limitation of this study is that assessment was limited to knowledge and did not progress to skills. en
dc.format.extent 154199 bytes
dc.format.mimetype application/pdf
dc.identifier.citation Kruger, C, Blitz-Lindeque JJ, Pickworth, GE, Munro, AJ, Lotriet, M 2005, 'Communication skills for medical / dental students at the University of Pretoria : lessons learnt from a two-year study using a forum theatre method', South African Family Practice, vol. 47, no. 6, pp. 60-65. [www.safpj.co.za] en
dc.identifier.issn 1726426X
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/2263/4424
dc.language.iso en en
dc.publisher Medpharm Publications en
dc.rights Medpharm Publications en
dc.subject Education en
dc.subject Medical methods en
dc.subject Dental methods en
dc.subject Curriculum en
dc.subject Communication skills en
dc.subject Drama/Theatre for the oppressed en
dc.subject Forum theatre en
dc.subject Action learning en
dc.subject Action research en
dc.subject.lcsh Communication in medicine en
dc.subject.lcsh Theater en
dc.subject.lcsh Drama in education en
dc.subject.lcsh Forums (Discussion and debate) en
dc.title Communication skills for medical/dental students at the University of Pretoria : lessons learnt from a two-year study using a forum theatre method en
dc.type Article en


Files in this item

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record