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Role of the Educational Atmosphere on Self-Efficacy Among Dental Students Publisher



Farshad F1 ; Kheirkhah M2 ; Virtanen JI3, 4 ; Hessari H5
Authors
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Authors Affiliations
  1. 1. Community Oral Health Department, School of Dentistry, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran
  2. 2. Nursing Care Research Center (NCRC), Department of Midwifery and Reproductive Health, School of Nursing and Midwifery, Iran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran
  3. 3. Department of Clinical Dentistry, Faculty of Medicine, University of Bergen, Norway
  4. 4. Institute of Dentistry, University of Turku, Finland
  5. 5. Research Center for Caries Prevention, Dentistry Research Institute, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran

Source: Strides in Development of Medical Education Journal Published:2023


Abstract

Background: Learning is due to behavioral changes in knowledge, skills, and attitude. Objectives: The current research assesses the state of the atmosphere, educational environment, and self-efficacy domains. It also assesses how the educational environment affects dental students' sense of self-efficacy. Methods: All clinical undergraduate dental students (N=190) at Tehran University of Medical Science's School of Dentistry were the focus of a descriptive-analytical research conducted in 2018. The Dundee Ready Education Environment Measure (DREEM), the demographic surveys, and the validated Persian version of the Sherer Self-Efficacy Scale were all employed by the researchers. The DREEM assessed students' perceptions of learning (PoL), teaching (PoT), academic self-perception (ASP), atmosphere (PoA), and social self-perception (SSP) in addition to other key categories. Demographic factors and educational data (academic level, admittance quota, overall average grade, final semester grade, employment experience outside of dentistry school, and self-perceived effectiveness) were included in the demographic questionnaire. The factors from the demographic questionnaire were compared to the educational climate and self-efficacy using linear regression analysis. Additionally, the association between the educational environment and self-efficacy was assessed using Pearson's correlation (rho) coefficient. Results: The majority of clinical dentistry students (87.3%) were single, female (52.6%), and lived in dorms. All DREEM domains and the overall educational environment, with the exception of the PoT domain (p-value=0.302), significantly correlated positively with students' self-efficacy (p-value < 0.05). Self-efficacy and the overall educational environment are highly associated (p=0.001, rho=0.311). Conclusion: A good educational atmosphere may enhance dental students’ self-efficacy. © 2023, Strides in Development of Medical Education is Published by Kerman University of Medical Science.