# The Impact of Digital Storytelling on Learning Outcomes and Student Satisfaction in Psychology Education for Nursing and Midwifery Students: A Quasi-Experimental Study

**Authors:** MARJAN NOORSHADI, MEHRI YAVARI, HOURA ASHRAFIFARD, SHIMA SADAT ZARIF NAHAD

PMC · DOI: 10.30476/jamp.2025.104978.2095 · Journal of Advances in Medical Education & Professionalism · 2025-10-01

## TL;DR

Digital storytelling improves learning and satisfaction in psychology courses for nursing and midwifery students compared to traditional lectures.

## Contribution

Demonstrates digital storytelling's effectiveness in healthcare education through a quasi-experimental study.

## Key findings

- Digital storytelling group had significantly higher post-test scores (75.21 vs. 54.97, p=0.001).
- Student satisfaction was higher in the digital storytelling group (38.15 vs. 31.22, p=0.0003).
- Gender had no confounding effect on learning outcomes or satisfaction.

## Abstract

The importance of retaining content in the long-term memory of medical students is well-documented. Given the narrative structure of medical disciplines, digital storytelling is an effective educational tool. This study investigates the effect of digital storytelling on the learning and satisfaction of nursing and midwifery students.

This quasi-experimental study included 20 third-semester midwifery students (intervention group, digital storytelling) and 50 first-semester nursing students (control group, traditional lectures), all enrolled in an undergraduate psychology course. Both groups participated in five initial lecture-based sessions. Thereafter, the intervention group received six weekly digital storytelling sessions, each featuring a 3–8 minute narrative followed by instructor-led discussions, while the control group continued with standard lectures and question–and–answer sessions. Learning outcomes were measured using pre- and post-tests, and student satisfaction was assessed using a validated questionnaire. Statistical analyses were performed, adjusting for baseline scores and demographic confounders.

The digital storytelling group showed significantly higher post-test scores in learning outcomes (75.21±17.75 vs. 54.97±23.40, p=0.001) and satisfaction (38.15±6.45 vs. 31.22±4.59, p=0.0003) compared to the traditional lecture group. The potential effect of baseline values, as well as non-homogeneous demographic variables across groups, was removed using non-parametric ANCOVA. The result confirmed that gender had no confounding effects on either learning outcomes or satisfaction. Additionally, the differences between the two groups in terms of learning and satisfaction remained significant (p<0.001).

Digital storytelling offers a meaningful and learner-centered approach that extends beyond content delivery. By fostering active engagement and deeper cognitive involvement, it transforms traditional instruction into a more personalized and reflective learning experience. This approach is recommended in healthcare education to improve instructional effectiveness and student satisfaction.

## Full-text entities

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

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

41 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12596429/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12596429