Article type
Year
Abstract
Background: Blogs are technologies that are being tested and assessed for their value in educational environments as a way to increase student engagement, assess student knowledge, and improve retention of material. This poster aims to report the experience and the results of the “Estudantes para Melhores Evidências” (EME) blog after 18 months of its launch as one strategy to engage students in the active learning of Evidence-Based Health Care (EBHC) topics and to help disseminate the content throughout social media channels.
Objectives: To describe the experience of a student-driven blog on EBHC written from and intended to students.
Methods: Descriptive case analysis. We used an analytics tool (Google Analytics) and its metrics to see where the website captured attention, and where we have opportunities to increase engagement.
Results: EME was officially launched in August 2021 with the support from Cochrane and has produced 75 blogs so far. All the blogs were written by Brazilian students; most of them undergraduates. The website has been visited 35.971 times by 27.353 users with 49.928-page visualizations (Figure 1). Eighty-six percent of the access was done by a new user, whereas 14% was done by returning users. Eighty-two percent of users were from Brazil, 7.02% from Portugal, 5,09% from the United States of America (USA), with several other countries with less than 1% (Figure 2). A few countries had no access so far, most of them in Africa and Asia. Seventy-six percent of users have from 18 to 44 years of age, with 54.15% of males. The most accessed blog was “Intervalo de confiança – o que é e como interpretar” (“Confidence interval – what it is and how to interpret”) with 4,034 pageviews.
Conclusions: Blogs are being assessed for their value in educational environments as a way to increase student engagement, assess student knowledge, and improve retention of material. We considered the results from the “Estudantes para Melhores Evidências” blog very exciting and promising to foster student engagement and learning on EBM content.
Patient, public, and/or healthcare consumer involvement: none.
Objectives: To describe the experience of a student-driven blog on EBHC written from and intended to students.
Methods: Descriptive case analysis. We used an analytics tool (Google Analytics) and its metrics to see where the website captured attention, and where we have opportunities to increase engagement.
Results: EME was officially launched in August 2021 with the support from Cochrane and has produced 75 blogs so far. All the blogs were written by Brazilian students; most of them undergraduates. The website has been visited 35.971 times by 27.353 users with 49.928-page visualizations (Figure 1). Eighty-six percent of the access was done by a new user, whereas 14% was done by returning users. Eighty-two percent of users were from Brazil, 7.02% from Portugal, 5,09% from the United States of America (USA), with several other countries with less than 1% (Figure 2). A few countries had no access so far, most of them in Africa and Asia. Seventy-six percent of users have from 18 to 44 years of age, with 54.15% of males. The most accessed blog was “Intervalo de confiança – o que é e como interpretar” (“Confidence interval – what it is and how to interpret”) with 4,034 pageviews.
Conclusions: Blogs are being assessed for their value in educational environments as a way to increase student engagement, assess student knowledge, and improve retention of material. We considered the results from the “Estudantes para Melhores Evidências” blog very exciting and promising to foster student engagement and learning on EBM content.
Patient, public, and/or healthcare consumer involvement: none.