# Bloom’s taxonomy—Can evidence-based teaching improve junior medical officers’ knowledge of the mental health and guardianship acts?

**Authors:** Trent Koessler, Warren Kealy-Bateman

PMC · DOI: 10.1177/10398562241260170 · 2024-06-14

## TL;DR

A study tested if modern teaching methods improve junior doctors' knowledge of mental health laws, finding that interactive methods boost knowledge more than traditional ones.

## Contribution

The study introduces the use of interactive pedagogical methods to enhance knowledge of mental health and guardianship acts among junior doctors.

## Key findings

- Interactive teaching methods significantly improved knowledge-based performance on EMQs.
- Confidence increased in both groups, but only the intervention group showed improved competence.
- Modern pedagogical approaches offer potential for better clinical outcomes in psychiatry education.

## Abstract

To determine whether a brief educational intervention for Junior Medical Officers (JMOs), using teaching methods aimed at achieving higher outcomes on Bloom’s Taxonomy, significantly improved participant confidence and knowledge in decision making about restrictive care.

JMOs received a teaching session on restrictive medical and mental health care. Groups were randomly assigned to either sessions including a component of modern pedagogical interventions (Think-Pair-Share and SNAPPS), or sessions including a control period focusing on reviewing a condensed summary of relevant information. Pre- and post-intervention measures were recorded for subjective self-ratings of confidence and scores on standardized clinically relevant extended matching questions (EMQs).

There was no difference in subjective confidence improvement between groups; however, the group receiving the modern pedagogical intervention demonstrated significantly greater objective performance on knowledge-based EMQs.

A brief modern pedagogical intervention using interactive teaching methods shows promise for improving knowledge of restrictive care and the Mental Health and Guardianship Acts. In the control group, similarly increased confidence in knowledge did not equate to increased competence on a knowledge assessment. Refurbishing educational interventions presents opportunities for improving clinical outcomes and engaging junior doctors in psychiatry.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

7 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11318215/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11318215