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Educating for Quality Healthcare: Improving Outcomes through Innovative Applications of Internet-based Technology Professor J C Taylor Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Global Learning Services) The University of Southern Queensland Presentation to the Educating for Quality Healthcare International Symposium 28 July 2003 Joseph Schumpeter (1934) predicted that every 50 years or so, technological revolutions would cause "gales of creative destruction” in which old industries would be swept away and replaced by new ones. Technological Changes Steam Power - 1780s to the 1840s The Railways - 1840s to the 1890s Electric Power - 1890s to the 1930s The Motor Car - 1930s to the 1980s Information Technology - 1980s to ? Pace of Change 1. Radio: 50 million users in 38 years 2. Television: 50 million users in 13 years 3. The Internet: 50 million users in 5 years Common Prediction: One billion users by the year 2003 Internet Access Population (millions) USA Japan China UK Germany South Korea Brazil Australia Netherlands Sweden 165.7 56.1 45.8 34.3 32.1 25.6 13.9 10.6 9.7 6.1 Total global population estimated at 580 million Source: A C Nielsen, June 2003 e-Readiness Rankings: Leaders e-Readiness ranking 1 2 3 (tie) 3 (tie) 3 (tie) 6 7 8 9 10 (tie) 10 (tie) 12 13 Country Sweden Denmark Netherlands US UK Finland Norway Switzerland Australia Canada Hong Kong Singapore Germany e-Readiness score 8.67 8.45 8.43 8.43 8.43 8.38 8.28 8.26 8.25 8.20 8.20 8.18 8.15 Source: The Economist Intelligence Unit eBusiness Forum, March 2003 e-Readiness Rankings: Contenders e-Readiness ranking 14 15 16 17 (tie) 17 (tie) 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 Country Austria Ireland South Korea Belgium New Zealand France Taiwan Italy Portugal Spain Japan Israel e-Readiness score 8.09 7.81 7.80 7.78 7.78 7.76 7.41 7.37 7.18 7.12 7.07 6.96 Source: The Economist Intelligence Unit eBusiness Forum, March 2003 The Knowledge Explosion Over 90% of the relevant literature in many technical fields, such as biotechnology, astronomy, computers and software, and environmental sciences, has been produced since 1985. Traditional programmatic approaches to education simply cannot keep up………... J B Quinn (2001) The Knowledge-based Economy There are increasing signs that our current paradigms for higher education, the nature of our academic programs, the organization of our colleges and universities, and the way that we finance, conduct and distribute the services of higher education may not be able to adapt to the demands of our time. J J Duderstadt (2001) Prediction 'The death of distance as a determinant of the cost of communications will probably be the single most important economic force shaping society in the first half of the 21st century'. Cairncross (1997) Thesis Interaction between Internet systems and educational processes will revolutionize traditional approaches to higher education and continuing medical education. Leadership Challenge A market-driven restructuring of continuing medical education as an industry – while perhaps both alien and distasteful to the academy – is an important perspective from which to view the future. Annotated list of worthwhile CME links to more than 230 Online CME sites offering more than 11000 courses and more than 19000 hours of CME credit. http://www.cmelist.com/list.htm This site is managed by Bernard M Sklar, M.D., M.S. [email protected] Why you should bother • …Online CME is always there, waiting for you, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, at home or at the office • You can proceed at your own speed • No travel costs • Very inexpensive Family Practice • A family doctor might start at the Family Practice Section of the CME List, and go from there to the • American Academy of Family Physicians site or to • FamilyPractice.com, sponsored by the American Board of Family Practice Internist • An internist might start at the Internal Medicine section of the Online CME List, and go from there to • Clinical Problem Solving Cases, sponsored by ACP/ASIM, or to • Johns Hopkins Advanced Studies in Medicine Cardiologist • A cardiologist could start at the Cardiology section of the Online CME List and go to • CardioVillage (University of Virginia) or • Baylor University’s extensive list of cardiology offerings Fast, Flexible and Fluid The transition from the Industrial to the Information Age was encapsulated by Dolence and Norris (1995), who argued that to survive organisations would need to change from rigid, formula driven entities to organisations that were “fast, flexible and fluid”. The Global Lifelong Learning Economy What type of institutions will survive? Will your institution survive? Increasing Competition The Cambridge e-MBA Cambridge University’s business school has joined forces with FT Knowledge, part of the global communications group Pearson plc, to offer this new degree from September 2001. Fast, Flexible and Fluid? 791 years ago Cambridge University passed a rule Requiring all students to reside in the town of Cambridge, England. In 2000 that rule was revoked. The 800 year-old rulebook had to be altered to make way for the university’s first Internet-enabled program, the global e-MBA. Email reply received from University of Cambridge MBA Office on 13 March 2003. “Thank you for your enquiry concerning the Cambridge MBA course. We do not have on-line learning or distance learning, we have considered this but decided not to pursue this.” Increasing Competition AllLearn (an e-learning partnership between Oxford University, Stanford University and Yale University) is offering 75 short courses in a dozen disciplines in the Fall Semester, starting 7th October, 2002 http://www.alllearn.org Future Projections A recent IBM report forecasts a threefold (US$4.5 trillion) jump in global education expenditure during the next 13 years. The World Bank expects the number of higher education students will more than double from 70 million to 160 million by 2025. (Source: Richard Gluyas, New Nabs e-School Deal http://finance.news.com.au, 22 April 2000). Future Projections By 2005, e-learning will be the single most used application on the web. Corporate investment in e-learning will grow from US$2.1 billion in 2001 to US$33.4 billion in 2005. (Source: Harris, Logan & Lundy, Gartner Research, 2001). The Big Picture Change is the only constant. Growth is the only certainty. Five Generations of Distance Education Technology The Correspondence Model The Multimedia Model The Telelearning Model The Flexible Learning Model The Intelligent Flexible Learning Model First Generation CHARACTERISTICS OF DELIVERY TECHNOLOGIES MODELS OF INSTITUTIONAL VARIABLE DISTANCE EDUCATION HIGHLY ADVANCED FLEXIBILITY COSTS AND ASSOCIATED REFINED INTERACTIVE APPROACHING ZERO DELIVERY TECHNOLOGIES Time Place Pace MATERIALS DELIVERY THE CORRESPONDENCE MODEL • Print Yes Yes Yes Yes No No Second Generation CHARACTERISTICS OF DELIVERY TECHNOLOGIES MODELS OF INSTITUTIONAL VARIABLE DISTANCE EDUCATION HIGHLY ADVANCED FLEXIBILITY COSTS AND ASSOCIATED REFINED INTERACTIVE APPROACHING ZERO DELIVERY TECHNOLOGIES Time Place Pace MATERIALS DELIVERY THE MULTIMEDIA MODEL Yes Yes Yes Yes No No • Audiotape Yes Yes Yes Yes No No • Videotape Yes Yes No • Computer-based learning (eg CML/CAL) Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No No • Interactive video Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No • Print Yes Yes Third Generation CHARACTERISTICS OF DELIVERY TECHNOLOGIES MODELS OF INSTITUTIONAL VARIABLE DISTANCE EDUCATION HIGHLY ADVANCED FLEXIBILITY COSTS AND ASSOCIATED REFINED INTERACTIVE APPROACHING ZERO DELIVERY TECHNOLOGIES Time Place Pace MATERIALS DELIVERY THE TELELEARNING MODEL • Audio-teleconferencing No No No No Yes No • Videoconferencing No No No No Yes • Audiographic communication No No No Yes Yes No No • Broadcast TV/Radio and Audio-teleconferencing No No No Yes Yes No Fourth Generation CHARACTERISTICS OF DELIVERY TECHNOLOGIES MODELS OF INSTITUTIONAL VARIABLE DISTANCE EDUCATION HIGHLY ADVANCED FLEXIBILITY COSTS AND ASSOCIATED REFINED INTERACTIVE APPROACHING ZERO DELIVERY TECHNOLOGIES Time Place Pace MATERIALS DELIVERY THE FLEXIBLE LEARNING MODEL • Interactive multimedia (IMM) Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes • Internet-based access to WWW resources Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes • Computer mediated communication (CMC). Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No Fifth Generation CHARACTERISTICS OF DELIVERY TECHNOLOGIES MODELS OF INSTITUTIONAL VARIABLE DISTANCE EDUCATION HIGHLY ADVANCED FLEXIBILITY COSTS AND ASSOCIATED REFINED INTERACTIVE APPROACHING ZERO DELIVERY TECHNOLOGIES Time Place Pace MATERIALS DELIVERY THE INTELLIGENT FLEXIBLE LEARNING MODEL • Interactive multimedia Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes • Internet-based access to WWW resources Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes • CMC, using automated response systems Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes • Campus portal access to institutional processes & resources Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Ask a question/ send an email NO Incoming “new” admin question from student Search / Match USQAssist: Self-service Knowledge Base Previous Questions Previous Answers “Immediate” admin feedback to student YES Trigger USQ staff member – “New Answer” 5th Generation Application Metadata Schema Model NO Duty Tutor Incoming “new” academic question from student Search / Match Reusable Learning Objects Database Previous Questions <meta tags> Previous Answers <meta tags> New Answer “Immediate” academic feedback to student YES Trigger 5th Generation Application Overview of Medical Infomatics Epilepsy System Case Details Doctor / Medical Professional Local DB Medications / Side Effects Reports Central Database Computer Medical Professional Web Server Reports Patient / General Public Patients Computer Patient / Public Patient search screen – Patient name is typed in and the search button is pressed. • Screen showing results of a search for “Tom”. • Patient is selected from the list. • Patient details are displayed. • Extra details are selected from tabs at top. • This screen shows the history of the the patient. • Details can be reviewed and updated on this screen. • This screen lists the seizure details for the patient. • These can be reviewed and updated from this screen. This screen displays current and past medications on the left hand side, with details for the selected one listed on the right hand side. Screen where notes can be entered in an unstructured manner about the patient and their treatment. Upload to Web Site • Collected details are uploaded to the central website on a regular basis. Updates for medication and side-effects are downloaded to the client. • Once the details are uploaded, analysis can be performed and reports produced and made available. • 110 system CDs have been distributed – with the assistance of Novartis, a further 1000 CDs are to be distributed. Enrolled Students USQ 2003 All students On-campus Off-campus (Australia) Off-campus (Overseas) 22,908 5,720 12,606 4,582 Note: Students studying solely online 887 USQ’s International Students 2003 Singapore 1,598 Malaysia 2,327 Hong Kong 565 South Africa 288 United Arab Emirates 114 Japan 93 Pacific Islands 180 India 18 Canada 98 China 195 Germany 188 Total, incl. students from 67 other countries 6,976 The GOOD System provides a simple way to Create, Manage & Re-purpose content XML (eXtensible Markup Language) RENDITIONS: Print STYLE SHEET: XSL Web CD DVD XSL XSL XSL XML CONTENT REPOSITORY: INPUT: DTD (Document Type Definition) XML Editor Ask a question/ send an email NO Incoming “new” admin question from student Search / Match USQAssist: Self-service Knowledge Base Previous Questions Previous Answers “Immediate” admin feedback to student YES Trigger USQ staff member – “New Answer” 5th Generation Application USQAssist Self-Service Knowledge Base During the first half of 2003 the system received: an average 9,075 hits per week; 95, 322 student contacts; 61,579 answers viewed; 23,079 searches performed; 3,566 questions using the “Ask a Question” facility. During S1, the e-CRM also managed a further 37,755 email queries. USQAssist Self-Service Knowledge Base Student support staff also save 25% of their time through the use of the knowledge-base for the automatic generation of suggested answers to email, phone and face-to-face enquiries The PC-ePhone http://www.usqonline.com.au Using the Internet as a mode of delivery will not automatically improve student learning. Laurillard (2002)…..“ The academic world has called each new technological device – word processing, interactive video, hypertext, multimedia, the Webinto the service of the transmission model of learning.” The Potential of e-Learning From transmission to transaction From the independent learner to the inter-dependent learner Communication Areas Content Areas Group Areas Student Areas Computer Mediated Communication (CMC) There is a fundamental qualitative difference between a traditional oncampus tutorial and asynchronous written communication online. Important Qualitative Difference Compared to the spontaneous and less structured nature of oral discourse, asynchronous discussion online engenders a disciplined and rigorous form of thinking based on the reflective and explicit nature of the written word. Brown & Duguid (2000) emphasised the importance of regarding learning as a social act: “Practice is an effective teacher, and community of practice an ideal learning environment.” Lave & Wenger (1991) emphasised the importance of the social context in which the learner is immersed, and learning as legitimate peripheral participation in a community of practice. In the online context, legitimate peripheral participation has become associated with the term “Lurker”. “One of the “silent majority” in an electronic forum; one who posts occasionally or not at all but is known to read the group's postings regularly.” (The Jargon dictionary, 2002) Student Participation Profiles Proactive Workers Peripheral Lurkers Parsimonious Shirkers Overview of Participation and Performance Student SubGroups Average Number: Discussion Board Hits Average Number: Messages Posted Average: GPA The Workers 193 38 5.43 The Lurkers 129 13 5.41 The Shirkers 36 4 4.30 Outcome The academic performance of the lurkers was on average not much less than that of the workers, thereby supporting the notion of learning as legitimate peripheral participation. The Future The success of the lurkers augurs well for the use of e-learning facilitated by intelligent databases and the flexibility inherent in interacting with virtual cohorts of students. Metadata Schema Model NO Duty Tutor Incoming “new” academic question from student Search / Match Reusable Learning Objects Database Previous Questions <meta tags> Previous Answers <meta tags> New Answer “Immediate” academic feedback to student YES Trigger 5th Generation Application 5th Generation In effect, fifth generation distance provides students with better quality tuition and more effective pedagogical and administrative support services at lower cost. The e-Revolution “Any new technology environment eventually creates a totally new human environment”. Marshall McLuhan