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Therefore, it cannot be assumed that these study results apply to social and administrative pharmacy, nor that these results translate to the US setting. 7 Preferences for testing could differ for the basic vs. A recent study from the Middle East reported that the majority of second-year pharmacy students preferred traditional paper (73%) over online (20%) testing for classes including laboratory work. Although studies have been published comparing PharmD student attitudes toward online learning with traditional methods, 2 limited studies have been published evaluating student preferences for testing. 6 Although computer-based testing has established advantages to administrators, the perceived benefits to test-takers, is unclear, especially as these apply to non-high stakes testing in PharmD courses. paper-and-pencil testing in high stake exams. 1, 3, 4 Additionally, no difference has been reported in performance when comparing computer-based vs. 5 Similarly, no consensus has been noted in differences with PharmD student attitudes when comparing online vs. 4 for review of pharmacy studies) or in long-term knowledge outcomes. traditional learning methods in pharmacy,1, 2, 3 noting no consistent differences in student performance (See Salter et al. Numerous published studies have compared the impact of online vs.
#DR. PENC P SOFTWARE#
This southern COP aims to expand software licensing for computer-based testing for its entire PharmD program curriculum. However, it is unclear if pharmacy students prefer one method over another, if they perceive either testing method to impact their grade, or if preferences vary based on sociodemographic factors. It is tempting to assume that because Millennial and Generation Z students are tech-savvy, they would prefer online or computer-based testing over traditional paper testing. In a required doctor of pharmacy (PharmD) class as part of standard teaching and testing procedures, first-professional year pharmacy students at a United States (US) mid-sized college of pharmacy (COP) experience two different testing methods: computer-based and traditional paper-and-pencil.
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