Perception and Motivation of First-Year Medical Students Regarding the Teaching of Physiology at Alioune Diop University of Bambey: An Exploratory Analysis
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.37506/0b1b0s37Keywords:
medical education; physiology; student perception; motivation;UADBAbstract
Background: Physiology is a fundamental and complex discipline in medical education, the mastery of which underpins understanding of clinical sciences. In the African context, characterised by limited teaching resources and growing student cohorts, assessing student perceptions is an essential lever for improving teaching quality.
Objective: This study aims to explore the perceptions and motivations of first-year medical students (Year 1) regarding the teaching of physiology at Alioune Diop University of Bambey (UADB), Senegal.
Methods: A descriptive cross-sectional survey was conducted among 39 Year 1 students using a structured anonymous questionnaire with five-level Likert-scale items. Themes covered pedagogical content, tutorial sessions (TD), teacher–student interaction, material conditions, and student motivation.
Results: Students were predominantly female (69.2%), with a mean age of 20.2 years, mostly single (97.4%), and of Senegalese nationality (82.1%). They rated the pedagogical content positively (69–76% agreement on key items) and the teacher–student interaction favourably (87–92% for communication-related items). Tutorial sessions were highly valued, with 76.9% agreement on their contribution to understanding. In contrast, material conditions received mixed to negative ratings: only 38.9% found classrooms suitable. Intrinsic motivation remained high: 89.5% believed that every physiology class can be interesting if one works hard, and 89.7% found the course genuinely interesting.
Conclusion. Despite significant infrastructural constraints, Year 1 students expressed an overall positive perception of physiology teaching and sustained intrinsic motivation. Targeted investment in teaching equipment and the strengthening of tutorial sessions could substantially improve learning outcomes.
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Copyright (c) 2026 Awa Ba, Mohamadou Alkhalifa Ba, Mor Diaw, Ndèye Fatou Ngom, Gora Mbaye, Babacar Mbengue, Philippe Manyacka Ma Nyemb, Abdoulaye Ba, Lamine Guèye

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