# Design and evaluation of an immunology and pathology course that is tailored to today’s dentistry students

**Authors:** Teun J. de Vries, Ton Schoenmaker, Laura A. N. Peferoen, Bastiaan P. Krom, Elisabeth Bloemena

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/froh.2024.1386904 · Frontiers in Oral Health · 2024-05-09

## TL;DR

This paper describes the design of a new immunology and pathology course tailored for dentistry students, focusing on active learning and real-world dental applications.

## Contribution

The paper introduces a novel, integrated course design for dentistry students that emphasizes active learning and dental relevance.

## Key findings

- Students appreciated the integrated approach to immunology and pathology in the course.
- Active learning methods were deemed appropriate and effective for achieving the course's educational goals.
- The course design successfully incorporated dental examples and generative AI tools.

## Abstract

Curricular reform provides new opportunities to renovate important pillars of the dentistry curriculum, such as immunology and pathology, with novel approaches that appeal to new generations of students. When redesigning a course that integrates both immunology and pathology at the level that provides dentistry students with sustainable knowledge that is useful for their entire career, several challenges must be met. The objective of the present study was to describe the considerations involved in the design phase of such a new course. First, the course should be compatible with the new view on the incorporation of more active learning and teaching methods. Practically, this means that the course design should contain fewer lectures and more seminars and tutorials, where the students have fewer contact hours and actively engage in using recently acquired knowledge within a contextual background. A mandatory session of team-based learning provides opportunities to apply knowledge in combination with academic reasoning skills, teamwork, and communication. Second, for a 4-week course, choices must be made: students will not become immunologists nor pathologists in such a short period. A governing principle for this course's design is that it should be based on understanding the basic principles of immunology and pathology. The ultimate goal for the students is to make the course immuno-logical and patho-logical, challenging them to reach a next level but clearly without oversimplification. Part of the course design should allow room for students to further study an immunological topic of their own choice, thereby contributing to their immunological curiosity and to their academic development. Third, to make it tailored to a new generation of dentists, examples from the field of dentistry are actively integrated in all aspects of the course. Finally, the era of ChatGPT provides novel opportunities to use generative artificial intelligence (AI) tools in the learning process, but it demands critical thinking of how to use it in a newly designed course. A mid-course evaluation revealed that students acknowledged that immunology and pathology were presented as an integrated course. The final course evaluation endorsed the use of these various educational methods. These methods proved to be appropriate and logical choices for reaching the learning goals of the course.

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** CD79A (CD79a molecule) [NCBI Gene 973] {aka IGA, IGAlpha, MB-1, MB1}, CTSC (cathepsin C) [NCBI Gene 1075] {aka CPPI, DPP-I, DPP1, DPPI, HMS, JP}, ACE2 (angiotensin converting enzyme 2) [NCBI Gene 59272] {aka ACEH}, IL1B (interleukin 1 beta) [NCBI Gene 3553] {aka IL-1, IL1-BETA, IL1F2, IL1beta}, HLA-C (major histocompatibility complex, class I, C) [NCBI Gene 3107] {aka D6S204, HLA-JY3, HLAC, HLC-C, MHC, PSORS1}, TNF (tumor necrosis factor) [NCBI Gene 7124] {aka DIF, IMD127, TNF-alpha, TNFA, TNFSF2, TNLG1F}, CD8A (CD8 subunit alpha) [NCBI Gene 925] {aka CD8, CD8alpha, IMD116, Leu2, p32}
- **Diseases:** Acute and chronic inflammation (MESH:D007249), autoimmune disease (MESH:D001327), caries (MESH:D003731), Immunology (MESH:D007154), gingivitis (MESH:D005891), juvenile periodontitis (MESH:D010520), tumor (MESH:D009369), Candidiasis (MESH:D002177), Papillon-Lefevre syndrome (MESH:D010214), infection (MESH:D007239), IgA deficiency (MESH:D017098), allergies (MESH:D004342), Sjogren (MESH:D012859), LAD (MESH:C535887), TS (MESH:D005879), periodontitis (MESH:D010518), skin ulcers (MESH:D012883), pathology (MESH:D005598), and chronic (MESH:D002908)
- **Chemicals:** Nickel (MESH:D009532), acrylate (MESH:C036658)
- **Species:** Oryctolagus cuniculus (domestic rabbit, species) [taxon 9986], Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (no rank) [taxon 2697049], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

21 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11111917/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11111917