So Jung Yune
Pusan National University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by So Jung Yune.
BMC Medical Education | 2012
Young Hye Cho; Sang Yeoup Lee; Dong Wook Jeong; Sun Ju Im; Eun Jung Choi; Sun Hee Lee; Sun Yong Baek; Yun Jin Kim; Jeong Gyu Lee; Yu Hyone Yi; Mi Jin Bae; So Jung Yune
BackgroundQuestioning is one of the essential techniques used by lecturers to make lectures more interactive and effective. This study surveyed the perception of questioning techniques by medical school faculty members and analyzed how the questioning technique is used in actual classes.MethodsData on the perceptions of the questioning skills used during lectures was collected using a self‒questionnaire for faculty members (N = 33) during the second semester of 2008. The questionnaire consisted of 18 items covering the awareness and characteristics of questioning skills. Recorded video tapes were used to observe the faculty members’ questioning skills.ResultsMost faculty members regarded the questioning technique during classes as being important and expected positive outcomes in terms of the students’ participation in class, concentration in class and understanding of the class contents. In the 99 classes analyzed, the median number of questions per class was 1 (0–29). Among them, 40 classes (40.4 %) did not use questioning techniques. The frequency of questioning per lecture was similar regardless of the faculty members’ perception. On the other hand, the faculty members perceived that their usual wait time after question was approximately 10 seconds compared to only 2.5 seconds measured from video analysis. More lecture‒experienced faculty members tended to ask more questions in class.ConclusionsThere were some discrepancies regarding the questioning technique between the faculty members’ perceptions and reality, even though they had positive opinions of the technique. The questioning skills during a lecture need to be emphasized to faculty members.
Korean Journal of Medical Education | 2010
So Jung Yune; Sun Ju Im; Sun Hee Lee; Sun Yong Baek; Sang Yeoup Lee
PURPOSE Problem-based learning (PBL) is an educational approach in which complex authentic problems serve as the context and stimulus for learning. PBL is designed to encourage active participation during learning. The goal of this study was to study the effects of PBL on academic motivation and self-directed learning readiness in medical school students. METHODS The subjects of this study were 190 students in the 1st and 2nd grade of medical school. The period of the PBL course was two weeks for Year 1 and five weeks for Year 2 students. Students completed one module over one week. Academic motivation tests and self-directed learning readiness tests were performed before and after the PBL course. The differences between the two groups were analyzed using paired t-test and repeated measures MANCOVA. RESULTS PBL had positive effects on academic self-efficacy (self-control efficacy, task-level preference) and academic failure tolerance (behavior, task-difficulty preference) as academic motivation. PBL had a mildly positive effect on self-directed learning readiness. In addition, the five-week PBL course had greater positive effects on academic motivation than the two-week course but not with regard to self-directed learning readiness. CONCLUSION Medical students engage in academic motivation and self-directed learning readiness during PBL, suggesting that the five-week PBL course has greater positive effects than the two-week course. Future studies are needed to confirm the most effective periods of PBL.
Patient Education and Counseling | 2016
Eun Ho Yu; Eun Jung Choi; Sang Yeoup Lee; Sun Ju Im; So Jung Yune; Sun Yong Baek
OBJECTIVE to investigate the effectiveness of the Micro Expression Training Tool (METT) and the Subtle Expression Training Tool (SETT) to help improve the non-verbal communication skills of medical students. METHODS In a randomized controlled trial, all participants were randomly allocated to either a training (n=41) or control group (n=41) and were pre-tested before education with METT and SETT at baseline. Then, training students took second tests after a 1-h class about interpreting micro and subtle expressions and control students took the second tests without the class. RESULTS METT pre-test scores were positively related with female gender, agreeableness, whereas SETT pre-test scores were negatively related with age and positively related with female gender. Mean METT score increases of 29.3% and mean SETT score increases of 36.2% were observed after training, whereas the control group achieved only a mean METT score increase of 11.0% at second testing. Increases in both test scores in the training group were significantly higher than in the control group. CONCLUSION METT and SETT are effective, simple tools for improving the micro- and subtle-expression reading skills of medical students. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS METT and SETT can be effective for improving the non-verbal communication skills of medical students.
Korean Journal of Medical Education | 2018
So Jung Yune; Jin Sup Jung
Purpose The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of curriculum revision on student performance in tests of the medical knowledge of students at Pusan National University. Methods Test scores of the Basic Medicine Comprehensive Examination (BMCE), conducted by the Medical Education Assessment Corporation, and internal clinical knowledge tests of the three integrated courses of the Pusan National University School of Medicine, during the last 3 years (2015–2017) were compared with an unpaired Student t-test and the results were considered to be significant at p<0.05. Results Curriculum revision in 2017 introduced the integration of basic and clinical courses at the organ level of medical education. Scores of BMCE and internal clinical knowledge tests in three integrated courses after curriculum revision showed a statistically significant increase after curriculum revision. Conclusion Curriculum revisions that integrated the basic and clinical courses in organ-level education improved student’s academic performance significantly.
BMC Medical Education | 2018
So Jung Yune; Sang Yeoup Lee; Sun Ju Im; Bee Sung Kam; Sun Yong Baek
BackgroundTask-specific checklists, holistic rubrics, and analytic rubrics are often used for performance assessments. We examined what factors evaluators consider important in holistic scoring of clinical performance assessment, and compared the usefulness of applying holistic and analytic rubrics respectively, and analytic rubrics in addition to task-specific checklists based on traditional standards.MethodsWe compared the usefulness of a holistic rubric versus an analytic rubric in effectively measuring the clinical skill performances of 126 third-year medical students who participated in a clinical performance assessment conducted by Pusan National University School of Medicine. We conducted a questionnaire survey of 37 evaluators who used all three evaluation methods—holistic rubric, analytic rubric, and task-specific checklist—for each student. The relationship between the scores on the three evaluation methods was analyzed using Pearson’s correlation. Inter-rater agreement was analyzed by Kappa index. The effect of holistic and analytic rubric scores on the task-specific checklist score was analyzed using multiple regression analysis.ResultsEvaluators perceived accuracy and proficiency to be major factors in objective structured clinical examinations evaluation, and history taking and physical examination to be major factors in clinical performance examinations evaluation. Holistic rubric scores were highly related to the scores of the task-specific checklist and analytic rubric. Relatively low agreement was found in clinical performance examinations compared to objective structured clinical examinations. Meanwhile, the holistic and analytic rubric scores explained 59.1% of the task-specific checklist score in objective structured clinical examinations and 51.6% in clinical performance examinations.ConclusionThe results show the usefulness of holistic and analytic rubrics in clinical performance assessment, which can be used in conjunction with task-specific checklists for more efficient evaluation.
Korean Medical Education Review | 2017
Eun Ju Park; Sang Yeoup Lee; Sun Ju Im; So Jung Yune; Beesung Kam; Sun Yong Baek; Yun-Jin Kim; Jae Seok Woo; Jeong-Gyu Lee; Dong-Wook Jeong; Young-Hye Cho; Yu-Hyeon Yi; Young Jin Tak
Eun Ju ParkᆞSang Yeoup LeeᆞSun Ju ImᆞSo Jung YuneᆞBeesung KamᆞSun Yong BaekᆞYun-Jin Kimᆞ Jae Seok WooᆞJeong-Gyu LeeᆞDong-Wook JeongᆞYoung-Hye ChoᆞYu-Hyeon YiᆞYoung Jin Tak Family Medicine Clinic and Research Institute of Convergence of Biomedical Science and Technology, Pusan National University Yangsan Hospital, Yangsan; Medical Research Institute, Pusan National University Hospital, Busan; Departments of Medical Education Unit, Family Medicine, and Physiology, Pusan National University Medical School, Yansan, Korea
Korean Journal of Medical Education | 2017
Sung Soo Jung; Kwi Hwa Park; HyeRin Roh; So Jung Yune; Geon Ho Lee; Kyunghee Chun
The purpose of this study is to investigate domestic and international research trends in studies of medical students’ characteristics by using the scoping review methods. This study adopted the scoping review to assess papers on the characteristics of medical students. The procedure of research was carried out according to the five steps of the scoping review. The full texts of 100 papers are obtained and are read closely, after which suitable 88 papers are extracted by us for this research. The review is mapped by the year of the study, source, location, author, research design, research subject, objective, and key results. The frequency is analyzed by using Microsoft Excel and SPSS. We found 70 papers (79.5%) on a single medical school, 15 (17.0%) on multiple medical schools, and three (3.4%) on mixed schools, including medical and nonmedical schools. Sixty-nine (79.5%) were cross-sectional studies and 18 (20.5%) were longitudinal studies. Eighty-two papers (93.2%) adopted questionnaire surveys. We summarized research trends of studies on medical students in Korea and overseas by topic, and mapped them into physical health, mental health, psychological characteristics, cognitive characteristics, social characteristics, and career. This study provides insights into the future directions of research for the characteristics of medical students.
Saudi Medical Journal | 2016
Sang Yeoup Lee; So Jung Yune; Sun Ju Im; Sun-Yong Baek
[no abstract available] Saudi Med J 2016; Vol. 37 (2): 217 doi: 10.15537/smj.2016.2.12703
Korean Journal of Medical Education | 2007
Tae Ho Yoon; So Jung Yune; Sik Yoon; Sun Hee Lee; Ihn Sook Jeong; Byung Kyu Park; Sang Yeoup Lee; Chulhun L. Chang; Hae Kyu Kim; Byung Yong Rhim; Hae Jin Jeong
Korean Journal of Medical Education | 2007
Sun Ju Im; So Jung Yune; Shin Young Kang; Sang Yeoup Lee; Hae Kyu Kim; Hae Jin Jeong