This article was migrated. The article was marked as recommended. Peer-assisted learning (PAL) is a potentially valuable teaching tool for students on veterinary and medical curricula, helping them to develop crucial learning, teaching and meta-adaptive skills (Lizzio & Wilson, 2004) which will serve them during their undergraduate studies and throughout their future careers. This reflective article describes experiences of PAL activities on a UK veterinary degree course, and discusses potential reasons for success and failure of such activities. Advice is given for anyone planning to implement, or reviewing their own experiences of PAL.
CITATION STYLE
Reid, A., MacDiarmid, R., Ormandy, E., Noble, K., & Penrose, F. (2017). Peer-assisted learning - an antidote for spoonfeeding? Reflections on peer-assisted learning activites in a veterinary curriculum. MedEdPublish, 6, 159. https://doi.org/10.15694/mep.2017.000159
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