Williamson, J.Brisson, B.Skowron, C.Farrell, R.Anderson, S.Spangler, D.International Veterinary Simulation in Teaching Conference (5th : 2017 : Pretoria, South Africa)Lincoln Memorial University. College of Veterinary MedicineOntario Veterinary CollegeRoss University. School of Veterinary Medicine2017-06-132017-06-1320172017Williamson, J. et al. 2017. The impact of model fidelity on acquisition of abdominal incision closure skills in novice veterinary students. [Poster]. The Fifth International Veterinary Simulation in Teaching Conference, 10-12 April 2017, Pretoria. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/2263/61037http://hdl.handle.net/2263/61037Poster presented at the 5th International Veterinary Simulation in Teaching Conference, 10-12 April 2017, held at the Intundla Conference Venue, Pretoria, South Africa.Includes bibliographical referencesVeterinary surgical simulation can be used to increase student competency prior to live animal surgery. Abdominal surgeries are common, so the ability to perform a three-layer abdominal incision closure is critical. This study compared one lower-fidelity (LF) model made of foam and fabric, and one higherfidelity (HF) model made of poured silicone, for teaching novice veterinary students this task. Veterinarians (n=10) evaluated both models. Students (n=38) were randomly assigned to LF and HF groups. They participated in four three-hour teaching sessions using their model and completed a model evaluation survey. Students were recorded performing three-layer closure on a canine cadaver before and after their training. Blinded raters scored the recordings, using a task-specific rubric. Veterinarians believed both models were suitable for training and assessment (median ‘agree’, 5-point Likert scale, both models). Students reported that both models were not helpful for learning the task (median ‘disagree’, both models), but student improvement scores, calculated by subtracting each student’s pre-test score from the post-test score, were positive values for 78% of LF and 95% of HF students (p=0.12). Improvement scores were statistically higher for the HF group (M=7.9) than for the LF group (M=4.1, p=0.04). This suggests that even for novice students, an increase in model fidelity may improve learning outcomes for three-layer incision closure. Selecting the most appropriate model for teaching remains a multifactorial decision.1 page : color photos, graphsPDFen©2017 University of Pretoria. Faculty of Veterinary Science. Provided for educational purposes only. It may not be downloaded, reproduced or distributed in any format without written permission of the University of Pretoria, Faculty of Veterinary ScienceVeterinary simulationVeterinary medicine -- Study and teachingE-learningVeterinary medicine trainingTeaching methodsTeaching -- Aids and devicesVeterinary medicine -- Study and teaching -- Simulation methodsEducational technologyVeterinary surgeryThe impact of model fidelity on acquisition of abdominal incision closure skills in novice veterinary students5th International Veterinary Simulation in Teaching Conference, 2017, Pretoria, South Africa : proceedingsInVeST proceedings, 10-12 April 2017Event