Abstract:
The European Higher Education Area (EHEA) is an opportunity to redesign medical education.
Academic training is now focused on acquiring not only knowledge, but also those
competencies critical to face complex professional scenarios. Together with re-evaluating
traditional teaching methods, EHEA has forced a technological shift in the way we teach. By
critically assessing the impact of novel teaching methodologies, we can better define biomedical
education demands. Here, we address this question on a sample of medical students
instructed in basic subjects along the first two academic courses. Two hundred and
one medical students participated in the study (n = 128 first year, n = 73 second year). Quantitative
(conventional survey statistics) and qualitative (open coding) approaches were combined
to analyze data from surveys, confidential questionnaires, semi-structured interviews
and open discussion. First year medical students rated more positively the use of participatory
methodologies than second year students. A major drawback is detected in the perceived
workload. Active teaching methodologies show a strong reliance on their time of
implementation for medical students, a key aspe...