Litcius/Paper detail

Teaching Disaster Evacuation Management Education to Nursing Students Using Virtual Reality Mobile Game-Based Learning

Hai Hu, Xiaoqin Lai, Hao Li, John Nyland

2022CIN Computers Informatics Nursing18 citationsDOI

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to explore the effectiveness of a virtual reality mobile game-based application for teaching disaster evacuation management education to nursing students. A pre-test, post-test, and final-test study design was used to compare traditional lecture group and game group instructional knowledge delivery effectiveness and instructional mode satisfaction. The statistical comparison of pre-test and post-test knowledge and decision-making scores did not reveal significant group differences for short-term improvement ( P ≥ .05); however, final test scores revealed that the virtual reality mobile game-based application group had significantly higher knowledge and decision-making retention scores compared with the traditional lecture group ( P = .000). The game group also had significantly higher instructional mode satisfaction scores for course interest and cooperation with others ( P < .05). The virtual reality mobile game-based application was more effective for teaching nursing students about disaster evacuation management educational training than lecture instruction. The greater satisfaction expressed by nursing students when using this instructional mode suggests that it may better facilitate self-initiated lifelong disaster evacuation learning behaviors.

Topics & Concepts

Virtual realityInstructional simulationTest (biology)Medical educationPsychologyMobile deviceNursingNurse educationInstructional designComputer scienceVirtual machineTeaching methodNursing managementMode (computer interface)Serious gameEmergency managementEducational gameLearning ManagementMultimediaMobile technologyMedicineVirtual learning environmentMEDLINEComputer-Assisted InstructionDisaster responseProblem-based learningEducational technologyMixed realityGame based learningVirtual communityPatient satisfactionDisaster Response and ManagementEvacuation and Crowd DynamicsSimulation-Based Education in Healthcare