A Novel Three‐Dimensional Drawing Activity to Learn the Dural Venous Sinuses


Journal article


Jacqueline K. Shaia, Carrie Elzie
The FASEB Journal, vol. 34, 2020 Feb 31, pp. 1-1

DOI: https:// doi.org/10.21692/haps.2019.027

Cite

Cite

APA   Click to copy
Shaia, J. K., & Elzie, C. (2020). A Novel Three‐Dimensional Drawing Activity to Learn the Dural Venous Sinuses. The FASEB Journal, 34, 1–1. https://doi.org/https:// doi.org/10.21692/haps.2019.027


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Shaia, Jacqueline K., and Carrie Elzie. “A Novel Three‐Dimensional Drawing Activity to Learn the Dural Venous Sinuses.” The FASEB Journal 34 (February 31, 2020): 1–1.


MLA   Click to copy
Shaia, Jacqueline K., and Carrie Elzie. “A Novel Three‐Dimensional Drawing Activity to Learn the Dural Venous Sinuses.” The FASEB Journal, vol. 34, Feb. 2020, pp. 1–1, doi:https:// doi.org/10.21692/haps.2019.027.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{jacqueline2020a,
  title = {A Novel Three‐Dimensional Drawing Activity to Learn the Dural Venous Sinuses},
  year = {2020},
  month = feb,
  day = {31},
  journal = {The FASEB Journal},
  pages = {1-1},
  volume = {34},
  doi = {https:// doi.org/10.21692/haps.2019.027},
  author = {Shaia, Jacqueline K. and Elzie, Carrie},
  month_numeric = {2}
}


Abstract
Drawing as a pedagogical tool in anatomy has been shown to be effective at increasing knowledge and engaging students. Therefore, a three-dimensional drawing activity of the dural venous sinuses was implemented to increase knowledge of the structures and improve understanding of their spatial orientation and drainage. Students were given a pre-test, listened to a lecture, performed the activity, and completed a post-test. For this activity, students working in pairs were given markers and white swim caps and instructed to draw the sinuses on their partner’s swim cap with anatomical accuracy. Results from the post- test revealed a significant increase in knowledge related to the structure and drainage of the dural venous sinuses. Students found that drawing was an effective way to learn anatomical structures and strongly agreed that translating a two-dimensional picture into a three-dimensional drawing improved their understanding of anatomical orientation. Overall, this was a quick, effective activity utilizing three-dimensional drawing to solidify the understanding of the dural venous sinuses. https:// doi.org/10.21692/haps.2019.027


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