How to integrate #FOAMed into #MedEd

And not Or_

This blog is based on a talk I’m giving on #FOAMed this week at the International Conference of Emergency Medicine in Cape Town. I’m really delighted to be given the opportunity to speak on the last day of the conference on a topic that, for me, originates from one of the first SMACC talks I did back in Sydney in 2013. That talk was about how the use of social media was subverting the traditional approach to education and how a number of organisations were starting to fight back.

Although I think that talk is still largely valid, in the last couple of years I do believe that we are seeing a greater integration of social media platforms into traditional medical education programs and although it’s patchy I think there are examples of great practice out there and it’s worth sharing those ideas.

It’s also worth reading the excellent paper in the EMJ by Damian Roland and Victoria Brazil on 10 ways to reconcile social media with traditional medical education. There are some great tips in there and I’d strongly recommend it as a read.

What sort of #FOAMed are we talking about.

If you are visiting St.Emlyns then I have no doubt you will be familiar with the concept of #FOAMed. There are some great links over at Life in the Fast Lane if you want a refresher and history course, but in essence #FOAMed is medical education delivered via social media platforms. These are free, open and accessible to all. It’s altruistic, international, broadly based and encompasses a range of different media including blogs, podcasts and twitter (amongst many others). It’s accessibility and wide reach have caused traditionalists to become concerned about its use by trainees.

How is #FOAMed impacting on Clinical education programs

The almost universal accessibility of #FOAMed through internet enabled devices has allowed students of all ages and profession access to clinical knowledge in rapid, and increasingly portable formats. This is a challenge to the traditional model of medical teaching when the control of content was largely dictated by the tutors. Lecturers made handouts, course directors specified course textbooks and learning sources in the form of books and timetabled learning events were linked to the curriculum. Whilst it was possible for learners to step outside of these boundaries there were barriers. Miss a lecture and it was missed, written content was often confined to that dicated by the course, and whilst it was entirely possible to purchase books outside of the required reading list is was expensive or limited. Libraries had limited hours and paper indexing systems that were slow and inefficient.

These barriers no longer exist. The #FOAMed world is not chronologically constrained, and (at least for the consumer) it is free at the point of access.

Screenshot 2016-04-18 14.42.10

Many studies are now demonstrating that junior doctors and medical students are using social media sources to supplement and enhance their education. However, the same studies appear to show that their teachers are not engaged to the same degree. This raises interesting questions:

Do the tutors know what their students are learning?

Do the tutors know the quality of what their students are accessing?

Are the students using #FOAMed as a way of assessing the quality of their tutors?

I suspect so. The studies allude to this, and anecdotally students and learners tell me that they seek out #FOAMed based learning that is accessible and engaging to supplement or replace their traditional courses.

The simple fact is that many learners are now utilising web based resources to enhance, supplement and in some cases replace their traditional learning materials. We also know that tutors are to some extent oblivious to this.

This is potentially a problem.

So what should we do?

We could rebel. We could try to restrict and warn our learners about the dangers of the internet and of the #FOAMed movement. I’ve seen this done in many ways, but perhaps the most common one is the ‘you might learn something different from the exam, it’s safer to stick with the course textbook’.

Now there is some truth in this. There are real risks that the pace of change and what Ken Milne and colleagues over at the SGEM call ‘knowledge translation’ don’t change at the same rate between exams and new knowledge. It is possible that students might be ‘at risk’ if they believe what they read on the internet.

King Canute trying to hold back the tide.
King Canute trying to hold back the tide.

This would of course be quite ridiculous. It would be analogous to a digital King Canute attempting to hold back a tide of web enabled media. The Genie is out of the bottle, as readily accessible information is here, and is clearly here to stay. A nihilistic approach is bound to fail and so the wise educator must learn to work with and not against the #FOAMed world. It is thus better to think of #FOAMed as an opportunity to enhance education.

Educators can no longer control the flow of information that our learners encounter. I would argue further that they should not even try to.

Screenshot 2016-04-18 11.59.54
Educators no longer control the flow of knowledge

Is #FOAMed really that different from traditional education models?

Much has been made of #FOAMed as a new movement in medical education, that it is an innovation and a new way of learning. I would argue that this is a fallacy, as there are clear parallels between traditional and new media.

Podcasts are audio recorded lectures.

Vodcasts are video recorded lectures.

Blogs range commonly resemble lecture notes or handouts, but can be as comprehensive as textbooks.

Hangouts and contemporaneous chats are tutorials and workshops.

Screenshot 2016-04-18 12.15.32

At its most basic level education might be described as the acquisition of knowledge or skills through study, experience, or being taught. In medical education we might also argue that this knowledge/skill subsequently leads to a change (or reinforcement) of behavior. The point is that learning is about outcomes and not the journey. There have always been different ways to learn and #FOAMed is arguably just a different medium for education. The fundamental principles of learning remain. Knowledge and skills transfer is the goal, it is the method that is contentious

How can we engage with #FOAMed in traditional learning programs?

This is a huge topic and is possibly a book in its own right, but for now we will focus on those that are easily achievable and accessible by an interested and innovative educator. We’re going to talk about 4 methods that we have successfully used.

  1. Directly incorporating into courses.
  2. Problem based learning
  3. Flipped classrooms
  4. #FOAMed prescriptions

Direct incorporation into courses.

#FOAMed resources can be directly incorporated into teaching courses as reusable learning objects (RLOs). The nature of #FOAMed based media is that it produced and then archived on a web based platform. This, unlike a traditional model of learning, allows it to be accessed in a chronologically and geographically dispersed fashion.

Screenshot 2016-04-18 12.31.53

In Virchester we have moved quite a lot of our education into an online environment. We use a Moodle platform to help our learners navigate a mix of traditional and web based learning. As you can see from the screenshot here on shortness of breath, learners are directed to a variety of resources that we have either created ourselves, or that we have linked to from other sources. We clearly identify core materials, but also offer higher level learning for those who are interested.

The mix of materials reflects what our learners do and allows us to guide them towards high quality resources. As we are teaching a cohort working a full shift pattern this element of the teaching is ‘assessed’ by asking them to complete a reflection on their learning that is then seen and reviewed by their local tutor. They can also put this in their portfolios as evidence of learning.

If you’re interested then you can read more on one of our past papers. You can also see how we have classifed our #FOAMed content against the UK curriculum. This helps learners and educators to find the right resurce for the type and grade of learner.

Problem Based Learning

Many medical curricula now use PBL as a model for adult learning. If you are unfamiliar with PBL then check the resources at the end of this blog. In brief, learners are presented with a case, they then brainstorm ideas and questions around the case, they then seek our and appraise the evidence before bringing it back to the group so that all can learn. The principle advantage is that learning is focused on what the learners identify as their own learning needs. Whilst it is best known at undergraduate level we find it more advantageous at postgraduate level where more senior clinicians can more readily identify the areas that they want to deep dive into.

A key component of the PBL learning cycle is the identification and sharing of learning materials. #FOAMed resources, together with more traditional sources are often used in this way. For example a PBL case based around a patient with serious asthma may lead the learning group to look at advanced approaches in the management of such patients. Whilst there is obvious benefit in searching and sharing for guidelines and papers, the learning can be enhanced through more discursive #FOAMed materials such as a podcast by Scott Weingart or Andy Neill. These explore the management of the very seriously ill patient in an engaging and narrative way that is lacking with traditional sources. They cannot replace traditional knowledge, but they can enhance it, encouraging learners to challenge and reflect on the strength of evidence they find.

In Virchester we use this PBL approach for senior trainees in emergency medicine. The dissemination, discussion and critique of all resources, including #FOAMed is a key aspect of the learning cycle.

Flipped Classrooms.

The flipped classroom is well described elsewhere. In essence, this model recognises that face to face teaching time is the best opportunity to discuss, clarify and debate new knowledge. In a traditional model much of the time is spent imparting knowledge, with just a short period of time at the end of a session to ask questions and for the learner to remodel and adopt the new. In a flipped classroom model the educator releases the knowledge delivery aspect in advance of the face to face session, thus liberating the face to face time for elements that Screenshot 2016-04-18 11.22.30require that interpersonal interaction. For example in APLS courses much of the knowledge based learning now takes place through e-learning in advance of the face to face components of the course. When candidates do interact with educators it features interactive workshops, simulation and discussion. Time spent sitting in rows and listening to lectures as a group is minimised and the face to face time’s potential is maximized.

#FOAMed Presciptions

The concept of an #FOAMed prescription came about from the ideas of David Sackett. With colleagues he developed the idea of an educational prescription where a clinical question is generated by a learner during normal clinical practice. In the educational prescription model the learner is tasked to go off and find additional evidence to then bring back and discuss with the educator. A #FOAMed prescription works in a similar way.

I use this in clinical situations where I might discuss a case with a colleague. During that interaction I, like all educators, try to impart some knowledge through discussion and debate. However, we know that it’s difficult to remember all that was said and discussed. A #FOAMed prescription is a direction from the educator to an online resource linked to the learning conversation. The learner is tasked to listen to the podcast, or read the blog and then discuss it at the next opportunity.

#FOAMed on prescriptionAgain, the emphasis is not simply to accept what is accessed via #FOAMed, but to use the resource as a springboard for further debate and discussion.

Unlike other techniques, the #FOAMed prescription often equires the educator to have a good working knowledge of appropriate resources and likely links. In practice this is not that difficult and if an aide memoire is required a quick google search by the educator can serve as a timely reminder.

I also use this technique when completing work placed based assessments (WPBAs). Most of the electronic submissions ask for ideas for future learning. Again, #FOAMed is one of the accessible reseources that learners can be navigated to.

What are the key skills for educators?

Educators must understand that learners are using #FOAMed. If that’s true then it is incumbent on them to be aware of what resources are being used and how. Being open to the use of #FOAMed is important. Better still is to identify and utilize #FOAMed resources in the ways described above.

However, the pace of #FOAMed creation means that no educator will be capable of remaining up to date in all possible areas at any one time. Nor should they.

Whilst it is advantageous for educators to signpost known resources I would argue that it is more important for them to instill critical appraisal skills in learners, to encourage them to be skeptical and questioning of all resources they encounter, #FOAMed included. It is a move for the educator to change from being the ‘sage on the stage’ to ‘guide on the side’ or as Rob Rogers and colleagues on the teaching course have described, for the educator to become the ‘learning choreographer’, directing, developing and encouraging the learner, but ultimately it is their performance that is judged.

Educators may also find themselves judged against ideals as perceived from internet sources. #FOAMed allows high quality content to be shared widely, learners now know what a great lecture looks like, how great slides can enhance a presentation and how performance and entertainment can enhance learning. This may raise and alter expectations amongst learners and educators may feel a need to respond and change to these expectations. The bar for what constitutes a good educator is increasingly globally set.

Educators may increasingly be encouraged to participate in the delivery of online content in the form of recordings or online resources. Note this is distinct from the technical aspects of #FOAMed creation which is not a requirement for all. An understanding of how to teach in an online setting is required though. The impact of any educational intervention is altered by the media it is communicated through (see blog on Marshal McLuhan and Medutainment), and this is clear with #FOAMed which in general has a more accessible, relaxed and intimate style. Many traditional lectures do not translate well to an online passive format if there is an expectation that learners will sit and listen attentively. There are exceptions of course, TED style (or SMACC style) talks translate well as they have embraced good design, stories and performance. It is apparent to me that not all educators easily translate their work from traditional to #FOAMed type platforms.

What are the key skills for learners?

Learners, like educators also face challenges with the sheer volume of available resources. The term ‘drinking from the firehose’ is pertinent and is a problem that we all face. Learners need skills in critical appraisal of #FOAMed based resources together with ability to search wisely and succinctly.

It is not always clear at what level an online resource is aimed. One of the great strengths of many blogs and podcasts is that they challenge dogma and push the boundaries of what is known or agreed. This is clearly excellent if you are an established clinician but it may be confusing to more junior learners who may question their core curriculum as a result. Learners need to be able to understand where #FOAMed content is aimed, and how to handle new or controversial data in light of their core teaching. No-one should fail an exam as a result of following a blog/podcast at the expense of their core teaching. One could argue that this is a responsibility of the #FOAMed producers, and many do signpost this (for example on St.Emlyn’s we link to different parts of the curriculum), but in reality it is difficult to do and learners will always be required to do this for themselves. Clearly these skills can be developed and supported by educators who understand social media.

We should also recognise what #FOAMed has done in expanding access to resources to other clinical groups. As knowledge becomes easier to access nurses, paramedics, students and other clinical specialities are listening, participating and creating in the same digital space. This is really exciting as the barriers that previously existed around different groups ‘controlling’ knowledge are being broken down. Learners of #FOAMed now extend far beyond the original target audience.

Predictions are very difficult

What’s the future?

It’s important that we don’t abandon the past by jumping onto a bandwagon of new technologies. Learners still need structure, curricula and a degree of didactic teaching. Students need to understand where their tutors are sourcing their information. That’s important so that they understand why they are being taught what they are being taught, but also so that they understand what’s going to be in the exam.

It’s highly unlikely that #FOAMed learning is going to disappear. Rather we will increasingly face problems of volume, quality and legacy as current resources (most of which are less than 4 years old) begin to age and suffer from the same difficulties of more traditional media.

Educators will need to maintain an awareness of how their students are learning and how they can support them in navigating the new media.

The future is really exciting and whilst #FOAMed will hopefully speed knowledge translation in an altruistic and egalitarian fashion there will always remain a need for high quality educators.

Our learners of today (of every grade) are arguably incredibly lucky. The ability to access, tailor and consume learning at a time and place that suits them is remarkable. It’s changing the way we learn, and thus it’s changing the way that we teach.

Summary

#FOAMed is a medium rather than an entirely novel system. It arguably integrates and reflects well with many elements of traditional clinical teaching methods. However, there are now differences in the re-usability, post publication review and accessibility that the medium supports.

The educators of the future will have many of the same attributes that they always had, it’s just that they will be skilled in the medium of the moment, and that is already manifest as #FOAMed.

The modern educator (and the educated) will need to develop skills in understanding the strengths and weaknesses of the new media. Those that do will thrive. Those that don’t will not die, but they may wither away, failing to reach a their potential for for self actualisation and transedence.

Further reading

Cite this article as: Simon Carley, "How to integrate #FOAMed into #MedEd," in St.Emlyn's, April 22, 2016, https://www.stemlynsblog.org/and-not-or-how-to-integrate-foamed-into-meded/.

30 thoughts on “How to integrate #FOAMed into #MedEd”

  1. “The point is that learning is about outcomes and not the journey”

    Is FOAMed amenable to having its outcomes measured just like any other MedEd intervention?

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  3. “Educators can no longer control the flow of information that our learners encounter. ”

    The educator who believed they ever could is deluded. The best they can do is create the conditions that optimise the learner’s ability to construct knowledge for themselves.

    1. I think that’s very true, but does not mean that some were not deluded! At the ICEM conference it was stated by some that they advised their trainees to avoid #FOAMed resources as it is confusing for learners.

      I would concur with your thoughts about this as well – it ’twas always the case.

      S

      1. Whilst no-one can restrict access, I believe there is still a role for mentors/educators to direct students to certain resources that they feel make be more appropriate to their level. Similarly, it is important to provide advice and cautions when interpreting specific sources of information. This applies whether to FOAMed, a sub-specialist textbook, peer-reviewed recommendation, departmental guideline or a published study. The context of the learner and their clinical practise will always remain relevant.

  4. Thanks so much for the incredibly insightful post Simon. I’m especially impressed with how you’ve used Moodle to integrate traditional modes of learning and FOAMed. I’ve suggested that our program directors at U of Toronto consider this platform. I agree fully that FOAMed is a great complimentary adjunct to traditional curriculi rather than an alternative, and I’ll be giving a talk to this effect at Canada’s largest EM conference Emergency Medicine Update in a few weeks.
    The only thing that doesn’t sit right with me is the similarity drawn between podcasts and audio lectures. Sure, they are similar in that they are both audio-based, but that is where the similarity ends. I believe that podcasts are a distinctly different medium to audio lectures, often containing multiple voices, stingers, jingles, editing and production that is geared toward ‘on the go’ listening. As you pointed out later in this blog “The impact of any educational intervention is altered by the media”, and I think the more that we recognize this as educators and learners, the better we’ll be able to educate/learn. Multimodal learning is where it’s at!
    Keep up the great work man and good luck with your talk!

    1. FOAMed authors have recognised and capitalised on how learning can be optimised using the Internet medium.

      1) Brevity and variety during learning episodes (to reinforce key messages and enhance audience attention)
      2) Creating a large ‘community of practice’ where information can be shared and contextualised by different people in different settings (connectivism)
      3) Establishing connections with related concepts through web-links, search functions and contemporaneous references (constructivist learning, connectionism)

      Although the Internet facilitates some of these educational principles, they can be also applied to other contexts. For instance SMACC was an early adopter of this format of which I am now seeing copied in other conference settings. Medical schools and local training programmes can also take advantage of these approaches with the content modified for their particular needs.

    2. Hi Anton,

      I think that’s a fair comment about the podcasts changing through the media and that’s certainly a point we’ve made many times before.

      In context this talk was aimed at de-escalating the concern that some traditionalists have and thus I was using it as a tool to link the past with the new.

      On reflection I think that point could have been made better.

      S

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  6. Great post, thank you. At the EM residency at Brown University I run a weekly online course that we call “Asynchrony” (for asynchronous learning) which sounds similar to the course you’ve got going on Moodle. I use Canvas, Brown’s online learning management system. Each week I post a topic module for the clinical content curriculum block we’re in, with links to #FOAMed resources, paid resources the residents have access to through EMRA, and online full text articles through Brown’s e-library. The residents work through them, post in a discussion section, and take a 10-question quiz, receiving an hour of didactics credit if they pass. Canvas logs it all, and keeps a record of their scores AND which particular questions were missed (easier to address deficiencies, etc.)

    The resident feedback is very positive — but their participation is optional. Just as we see in the #FOAMed world in general, I have a cadre of very some involved residents, and many who eschew it entirely.

    So I agree wholeheartedly that it’s ‘and’ not ‘or’. We’d never just had a resident Rosen’s and say, “off you go!” Neither should it be that way with #FOAMed. None of these resources should exist in a vacuum; educators should be familiar with all the tools in their box — and digital resources are evolving into a very, very useful tool — but we’ve got to be handy with everything in the box.

    1. For our trainees we are using online resources in conjunction with our formal training sessions in a “flipped classroom .approach. We have created a trainee website which revolves around a clinical case. Included are a set of questions to be divided up by trainees of various levels. They include basic biomedical sciences, the clinical approach to the problem and controversies.

      An example would be the physiology of work of breathing, the approach to the patient in respiratory failure and the current evidence of NIV.

      The aim is to draw all the related threads of the biomedical and clinical sciences into a coherent understanding of the topic and its clinical application.

      They are able to use whatever resources required to answer the questions. These are presented over structured two hour period. In their brief 10-15 min presentation, each trainee is encouraged to create an engaging and interactive summary that stimulates discussion and questions. The session is moderated by a consultant to help tie the information together.

      The additional impact of this is to create a whole generation of capable scholars and educators.

      1. We’ve only started this approach in 2016. Currently the format occurs monthly. A reasonable amount of thought is required to create a realistic case vignette with learning issues so doing it more frequently will be prohibitive. However, my impression is that we are finding that the trainees are highly engaged in this new approach. Whether this translates this to hard learning outcomes remains to be seen.

      2. Yes, the vignettes may be challenging, but if you record, collate and curate them they can be used again, and again (the concept of reusable learning objects).

        vb

        S

    2. Thanks Gita,

      The issue of engagement is interesting and is something we have noticed too. We’ve mulled it over a few times and have a few observations/

      1. Groups work best when there are one or two enthusiasts. These ‘peer facilitators’ as they are known motivate the group through their enthusiasm and bring everyone up in terms of activity and engagement.
      2. Silence in cyberspace is really quiet. If someone is quitely listening in a tutorial or lecture you can still notice this. If they are just listening (and learning) on line, it may not be so obvious.
      3. Contamination is a powerful tool for departmental learning. To hange practice you don’t need everyone to take part, just ‘enough’ and ideally those with peer or power influence to engage. Whilst the learning can take place on line, change takes place as it translates into the workplace through role modelling, teaching and demonstration.

      I appreciate these apply more at a more senior level (than med students) but there is something in it (notably 1).

      I have references somewhere (though they are quite old now).

      S

      1. “Silence in cyberspace is really quiet.” SO very true, Simon!

        Many residents do tell me that they do check into the content every week, but don’t interact on the discussion board or take the quiz (which are required for credit.) They are the equivalent of social media ‘lurkers’. But their silence is deafening — at least when you lecture live, you can see their eyes on you! It’s something to get used to in this new medium (because teachers like validation, too.) It’s just as our residents feel when they post on our teaching blog — if there aren’t any comments or likes, it’s unsatisfying for them (but when I tell them how many page views or shares their post has had, they’re much happier about the work they put into it.)

        Unless there’s a flipped classroom aspect with live interaction, it seems we can’t draw out the lurkers, or find out how much they’ve taken away from the assignment (unless we make participation mandatory.) I find Derek’s description of what they do at their institution very interesting, as is the “contamination” effect. But undoubtedly that knowledge translation could happen faster if more residents were fully engaged with the assignments.

        Which begs an interesting question: does #FOAMed require a live interaction with the learners/lurkers at some point in order to be an effective teaching tool? And in institutions that integrate it, should it be mandatory? (Neither of these is the case with our course currently.)

        Interesting discussion — thanks for your insights.

      2. “To change practice you don’t need everyone to take part, just ‘enough’ and ideally those with peer or power influence to engage. ”

        Simon,

        Are you using FOAMed as a change management tool or to create uniformity in practice? That is a very behaviourist approach to learning. If you want to do that in a department, just write a protocol and issue a dictum for everyone to follow it.

      3. Not so much the #FOAMed as change management, but certainly our firewalled departmental discussion boards are a strong tool for change. Realistically it’s one of the most effective methods of communicating and discussing new and interesting ideas with the whole team.

        Ask yourself when the last time that your entire department met face to face, at the same time, in the same place. If you’re anything like us I suspect that the answer is ‘never’.

        Cyberspace is an alternative comms method for a chronologically and geographically distributed workforce.

        vb

        S

      4. “Unless there’s a flipped classroom aspect with live interaction, it seems we can’t draw out the lurkers, or find out how much they’ve taken away from the assignment”

        Lurkers can still hide within a flipped classroom/small group discussion but it becomes more obvious they are doing so.

        But I don’t think you can ever force someone to engage with a group or utilise a specific learning resource. Similarly we may need to acknowledge that some people learn better alone or rely on alternative sources of information. Each student constructs knowledge uniquely.

        The best we can do is offer them as many attractive and valid options that may be able to fit into their current level of learning and understanding.

  7. Natalie Lafferty

    Super piece Simon, I’ll be sharing it with my next batch of SSC students. Another way to incorporate #FOAMed into #MedEd is to involve students in creating #FOAMed. As Frank Oppenheimer said the best way to learn is to teach – on our Doctor as Digital Teacher SSC students create #FOAMed resources and have them peer reviewed by one of our consultants. Here’s an example

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Thanks so much for following. Viva la #FOAMed

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