Evaluating Study Techniques for Australian Medical Students During Clinical Placement: A Scoping Review
Georgia Bartley, Samantha Waugh, Vinod Gopalan

TL;DR
This study reviews which study techniques Australian medical students find most useful during clinical placements, focusing on self-directed learning and the impact of digital resources post-pandemic.
Contribution
The study provides a scoping review of study techniques for Australian medical students during clinical placements, highlighting the role of digital tools post-COVID-19.
Findings
Third-party online tools like question banks and mobile apps are commonly perceived as effective for self-directed learning.
There is limited evidence on study techniques post-pandemic due to few recent studies and lack of standardized evaluation tools.
Pre-pandemic and international studies have limited relevance to the current Australian context.
Abstract
Transitioning from pre-clinical to clinical phases of medical education represents a unique challenge as students learn most content through self-directed learning (SDL), rather than the more prescriptive pre-clinical curriculum. There is a range of SDL study techniques employed by medical students on placement. The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated the adoption of digital resources, prompting a need to reassess the study techniques that best support clinical-year medical students. However, there is a lack of research on which study techniques Australian clinical-year medical students find most effective. The objective of this study is to evaluate the evidence on student-perceived utility of common study techniques for SDL whilst on clinical placement in Australia. A qualitative scoping review of literature on PubMed and Medline Ovid was performed in 2024. Study inclusion criteria for…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInnovations in Medical Education · Innovative Teaching Methods · COVID-19 and Mental Health
