Reflective blogs in clinical education to promote critical thinking in dental hygiene students. (17/75)

One challenge facing dental hygiene, as well as dental, education is to identify clinical teaching strategies promoting critical thinking and clinical reasoning. These skills are crucial elements in the practice of dental hygiene. A two-group design (intervention, n=28, and control, n=30) assessed first-year dental hygiene students using pre-and post-Health Science Reasoning Test (HSRT) scores to evaluate the effect of reflective blogging on critical thinking skills. A reflective blog rubric, based on Mezirow's levels of reflection, determined if reflective blogging increased the level of reflection for dental hygiene students. The results suggest within this nonprobability sample that reflective blogging did not produce a significant change in students' HSRT scores (p>0.05). However, analyses of reflective blog rubric scores demonstrated statistically significant improvements (p<0.05) in students' levels of reflection. Furthermore, data analysis revealed a correlation (p<0.05) between HSRT subscale scores and the element of reflection scores for the intervention group. This study addressed needs of the dental and dental hygiene education community by examining the use of blogs, an emerging technology, as a tool for reflecting on clinical experiences and, in turn, for promoting critical thinking.  (+info)

hivstigma.com, an innovative web-supported stigma reduction intervention for gay and bisexual men. (18/75)

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When do online sexual fantasies become reality? The contribution of erotic chatting via the Internet to sexual risk-taking in gay and other men who have sex with men. (19/75)

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Patients' perspectives on self-testing of oral anticoagulation therapy: content analysis of patients' internet blogs. (20/75)

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Case study: An ethics case study of HIV prevention research on Facebook: the Just/Us study. (21/75)

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Using SMS text messaging to assess moderators of smoking reduction: Validating a new tool for ecological measurement of health behaviors. (22/75)

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Cyber and traditional bullying: differential association with depression. (23/75)

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Putting the pieces together: endometriosis blogs, cognitive authority, and collaborative information behavior. (24/75)

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