Can Students Create Their Own Educational Escape Room? Lessons Learned from the Opioid Crisis Escape Room

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Abstract

Educational escape rooms (EERs) are live-action, team-based games used to teach content-related and generic knowledge and skills. Instead of students just playing the EER, we believed that giving them the opportunity to create their own EERs would augment the learning effects of this teaching method. We report on the feasibility, evaluation, and lessons learned of our assignment on an opioid epidemic-based EER. This original teaching method appealed to most students, but the workload was evaluated to be too high. Our lessons learned include the need for sufficient (extrinsic) motivation, careful explanation of the assignment, and small group sizes.

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Bakkum, M. J., Richir, M. C., Sultan, R., de la Court, J. R., Lambooij, A. C., van Agtmael, M. A., & Tichelaar, J. (2021). Can Students Create Their Own Educational Escape Room? Lessons Learned from the Opioid Crisis Escape Room. Medical Science Educator, 31(6), 1739–1745. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40670-021-01425-5

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