Perceptions of Undergraduate Students towards Utilization of Clinical Simulation in Teaching and Learning in Rural Universities in Uganda: A Mixed method study
Pamella Rosset Adongo, Joshua Epuitai, Paul Oboth, Felister Apili, Edward Kumakech, Samuel Owusu-Sekyere, Julius N. Wandabwa

TL;DR
This study explores how undergraduate students in rural Ugandan universities perceive the use of clinical simulation in their education.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into the perceptions of clinical simulation among students in rural African universities.
Findings
Students demonstrated a positive perception of clinical simulation in teaching and learning.
Simulation was perceived to enhance understanding of clinical concepts and stimulate critical thinking.
Participants found simulation realistic and believed knowledge gained could be applied in clinical settings.
Abstract
Simulation is a new pedagogical method in Africa that underscores the need to operationalize it and generate context-specific scholarship regarding clinical simulation in Africa. Despite the superior learning outcomes of using simulation in medical education, its use in developing countries is often limited, compounded by limited scholarship on simulation especially relevant to an African context. The research aimed to explore perceptions surrounding the use of simulation among undergraduate students. A mixed method convergent parallel design was used in which both the quantitative and qualitative approaches were employed currently to explore the perception of the undergraduate students towards the use of clinical simulation in teaching and learning. The quantitative approach assessed the perception of the students on a five-point Likert from strongly disagree to strongly agree scale…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSimulation-Based Education in Healthcare · Innovations in Medical Education · Interprofessional Education and Collaboration
