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Currently submitted to: JMIR Preprints

Date Submitted: Jul 30, 2023
Open Peer Review Period: Jul 30, 2023 - Jul 14, 2024
(currently open for review and needs more reviewers - can you help?)

Warning: This is an author submission that is not peer-reviewed or edited. Preprints - unless they show as "accepted" - should not be relied on to guide clinical practice or health-related behavior and should not be reported in news media as established information.

Institutional Preparedness for ELearning in Healthcare Professions Education: A Case of Mulungushi University School of Medicine and Health Sciences

  • Michael Mumba Kanyanta; 
  • Mercy Monde Wamunyima; 
  • Michael Chigunta; 
  • James Sichone; 
  • Francina. N. S. Makondo; 
  • Mildred Zulu; 
  • Selestine Nzala; 
  • Patricia Katowa-Mukwato; 
  • Elliot Kafumukache; 
  • Emmanuel Mwila Musenge; 
  • Christabell Mwiinga; 
  • Kabwe Chitundu; 
  • Manasseh Mvula; 
  • Concepta Kwaleyela; 
  • Susan Mutemwa; 
  • Phadaless Phiri-Sinkamba; 
  • Linda Kampata; 
  • Marjorie Kabinga-Makukula; 
  • Ruth Wahila; 
  • Bornwell Sikateyo; 
  • Chileshe Mwaba-Siwale; 
  • Miyoba Michelo; 
  • Nawa Mukumbuta; 
  • Charity Syatalimi; 
  • Fastone Goma

ABSTRACT

Background:

In a bid to enhance eLearning at Mulungushi University School of Medicine and Health Sciences in Kabwe - Zambia, the Strengthening Health Professional Workforce Education Programs for Improved Quality Health Care in Zambia (SHEPIZ) project in 2020, conducted an evaluation of Mulungushi University's level of preparedness for eLearning as an initial step towards building the university’s capacity.

Objective:

This article provides a systematic description of the evaluation process, lessons learned, and implications for the future in enhancing eLearning programs at Mulungushi University School of Medicine and Health Sciences.

Methods:

The evaluation process took a two-phased approach. The first phase involved a desk review of literature on eLearning evaluation that informed the development of a framework to be used in the evaluation process. In the second phase, actual data was gathered through key informant interviews and a thorough physical assessment of ICT infrastructure.

Results:

Consequent to the desk review, a modified five (5) criteria evaluation framework was developed that considered key factors around organizational arrangements, Managerial approach, Technical and interface integration, Educational requirements, and Logistic support. An evaluation of the five critical factors demonstrated that Mulungushi University School of Medicine and Health Sciences had inadequate ICT infrastructure with low internet bandwidth and a lack of onsite technical support for the effective implementation of eLearning programs. Lessons learned and recommendations: Some of the lessons learnt were that: The use of an evaluation framework to assess an institution's readiness for the adoption of eLearning was essential and that implementing eLearning programs might be difficult in the absence of on-site ICT technical staff and critical ICT infrastructure. Some of the recommendations made were that: Mulungushi University needed to conduct a self-assessment using the critical factors framework; have technical staff on site for system maintenance; give lecturers and students the necessary training and assistance to enable them to use eLearning resources effectively.

Conclusions:

Evaluation of Mulungushi University revealed that most of the critical factors for eLearning had not been fully addressed and the modified critical components framework could be a useful tool for institutional self-evaluation as an antecedent to effective delivery of the eLearning programs.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Kanyanta MM, Wamunyima MM, Chigunta M, Sichone J, Makondo FNS, Zulu M, Nzala S, Katowa-Mukwato P, Kafumukache E, Musenge EM, Mwiinga C, Chitundu K, Mvula M, Kwaleyela C, Mutemwa S, Phiri-Sinkamba P, Kampata L, Kabinga-Makukula M, Wahila R, Sikateyo B, Mwaba-Siwale C, Michelo M, Mukumbuta N, Syatalimi C, Goma F

Institutional Preparedness for ELearning in Healthcare Professions Education: A Case of Mulungushi University School of Medicine and Health Sciences

JMIR Preprints. 30/07/2023:51393

DOI: 10.2196/preprints.51393

URL: https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/51393

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© The authors. All rights reserved. This is a privileged document currently under peer-review/community review (or an accepted/rejected manuscript). Authors have provided JMIR Publications with an exclusive license to publish this preprint on it's website for review and ahead-of-print citation purposes only. While the final peer-reviewed paper may be licensed under a cc-by license on publication, at this stage authors and publisher expressively prohibit redistribution of this draft paper other than for review purposes.

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