Developing and Testing a Framework for Learning Online Collaborative Creativity in Medical Education: Cross-Sectional Study
Abstract BackgroundCollaborative creativity (CC) is a social process of generating creative and innovative solutions to real-world problems through collective effort and interaction. By engaging in this process, medical students can develop abilities and mindset for creative t...
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| Main Authors: | , , , , |
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| Format: | Article |
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
JMIR Publications
2025-06-01
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| Series: | JMIR Formative Research |
| Online Access: | https://formative.jmir.org/2025/1/e50912 |
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| Summary: | Abstract
BackgroundCollaborative creativity (CC) is a social process of generating creative and innovative solutions to real-world problems through collective effort and interaction. By engaging in this process, medical students can develop abilities and mindset for creative thinking, teamwork, interdisciplinary learning, complex problem-solving, and enhanced patient care. However, medical students have demonstrated limited creativity, constrained by existing pedagogical approaches that predominantly emphasize knowledge outcomes. The increasing complexity of health care challenges necessitates a pedagogical framework for medical students to foster CC in a rapidly evolving professional environment.
ObjectiveThis study aimed to develop, test, and evaluate a new Framework for Learning Online Collaborative Creativity (FLOCC).
MethodsFLOCC builds on established pedagogical approaches such as design thinking and integrates sociocultural learning methods (team-based learning [TBL] and problem-based learning [PBL]). It includes 4 individual asynchronous activities (empathy map, frame your challenge, turning insights into how might we questions, and individual brainstorming) and 5 collaborative synchronous activities (bundle ideas, list constraints, final idea, prototyping, and blind testing). In this cross-sectional study, 85 undergraduate medical students participated in 2 separate studies (study 1, n=44; study 2, n=41) involving health care and engineering sustainability problems. Learner acceptability was measured using a 31-item survey (using 7-point Likert scale) consisting of 4 factors (distributed creativity, synergistic social collaboration, time regulation and achievement, and self and emotions) and 3 free text questions. Free-text comments were subjected to the inductive thematic analysis.
ResultsMost students were positive about FLOCC, with distributed creativity and synergistic social collaboration factors receiving the highest mean percentages of “’Agree” (78/85, 92% and 75/85, 88%, respectively). These were followed by time regulation and achievement factor (68/85, 80%) and the self and emotions factor (59/85, 70%). Only time regulation and achievement was statistically significant (P
ConclusionsWith effective time management, FLOCC shows potential as a framework for nurturing CC in medical students. Medical schools could provide the opportunity and environment that supports creative thinking; therefore, creativity-focused approaches could be integrated into the curriculum to encourage a culture of creativity for breakthrough solutions by future doctors. |
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| ISSN: | 2561-326X |