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Staley, Kendra; Allen, Carolyn; Hamp, Anna – English Teaching Forum, 2020
Teaching English for specific purposes (ESP), such as Medical English, is especially impactful due to high student motivation and immediate real-world application. Medical professionals devote their careers to improving the health and lives of others. With English-language skills, medical professionals can further their own professional…
Descriptors: Case Studies, English for Special Purposes, Medicine, Student Motivation
Wong, Ken Yan; Job, Claire; Anstey, Sally – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2020
In a previous article, we theorised that patients' stories prepare students by allowing them to reflect on their practice in the safety of the academic environment. This article furthers this theory by arguing that, when engaging with patients through storytelling, students grow epistemologically, whereby they develop knowledge about empathetic…
Descriptors: Patients, Story Telling, Empathy, Allied Health Personnel
Ochs, Vanessa L. – Journal of Jewish Education, 2019
When Jewish Sensibilities were formulated (2003) as a framework, it was not for the purpose of teaching Jews how or why to be Jewish. Rather, Jewish Sensibilities were a way for Jews to reflect on the Jewish content already in their lives; they also allowed practitioners in the field of health care to think about the Jewish patients and families…
Descriptors: Jews, Judaism, Guidelines, Teaching Methods
Denis, Colette; Lasfargues, Charline; Buffin-Meyer, Bénédicte – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2021
The practical work described here is designed for third-year bachelor students in Life Sciences attending a kidney physiology course. It illustrates how urinary biochemistry can be used for a medical diagnosis. Students have to measure glucose, proteins, and creatinine concentrations in three simulated urine samples. First, they independently…
Descriptors: Biochemistry, Science Instruction, Diseases, Teaching Methods
Zraick, Richard I. – Teaching and Learning in Communication Sciences & Disorders, 2020
Standardized patients (SPs) are increasingly being used with students in the field of communication sciences and disorders (CSD). The purpose of this paper is to describe the use of SPs with CSD students. Challenges to the clinical education of students are described, and a call is made to expand the use of SPs to facilitate student learning of…
Descriptors: Communication Disorders, Role Playing, Patients, Clinical Teaching (Health Professions)
Wilcox, Steve – American Journal of Play, 2019
Game design offers a unique but often misunderstood pedagogical opportunity. The author draws on learning theory, feminist epistemology, and game studies to analyze a novel genre of games capable of realizing this opportunity by mobilizing knowledge through play--praxis games--founded on the concept of situated praxis. Situated praxis encourages…
Descriptors: Educational Games, Instructional Design, Praxis, Play
Lefèvre, Thomas; Gagnayre, Rémi; Gignon, Maxime – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2017
Simulation in healthcare in an way to train professionals but it is not yet use commonly to train patient or their caregivers. Recently, it has been suggested to extend simulations to patients with chronic conditions. Simulations could help patients and caregivers to acquire psychosocial and self-management skills. This approach proved to be…
Descriptors: Simulation, Chronic Illness, Patient Education, Caregiver Training
Sanko, Jill S. – Quarterly Review of Distance Education, 2017
Simulation can be used for teaching or practicing both technical skills (insertion of intravenous catheters, or suturing for example) and non-technical skills (communication and teamwork). A combination of full body, high and low technology simulators (mannequins designed to depict humans), body part or body system-specific task trainers (models…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Simulation, Nursing Education, Skill Development
Boldt, Gail; Valente, Joseph Michael – Curriculum Inquiry, 2016
This article draws on ethnographic research at L'école Gulliver, a preschool in Paris that integrates children with disabilities in mainstream classrooms with non-disabled peers. The preschool provides a case example of a collectivist integration approach to constructing shared institutional life, which is conceptualized in part through their…
Descriptors: Ethnography, Collectivism, Preschool Children, Disabilities
Davitti, Elena; Braun, Sabine – Interpreter and Translator Trainer, 2020
Video Remote Interpreting (VRI) is a modality of interpreting where the interpreter interacts with the other parties-at-talk through an audiovisual link without sharing the same physical interactional space. In dialogue settings, existing research on VRI has mostly drawn on the analysis of verbal behaviour to explore the dynamics of these…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Translation, Verbal Communication, Language Processing
Craig, Shelley L.; McInroy, Lauren B.; Bogo, Marion; Thompson, Michelle – Journal of Social Work Education, 2017
Simulation-based learning (SBL) is a powerful tool for social work education, preparing students to practice in integrated health care settings. In an educational environment addressing patient health using an integrated care model, there is growing emphasis on students developing clinical competencies prior to entering clinical placements or…
Descriptors: Social Work, Counselor Training, Simulation, Teaching Methods
Clement, T.; Brown, J.; Morrison, J.; Nestel, D. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2016
General practice registrars in Australia undertake most of their vocational training in accredited general practices. They typically see patients alone from the start of their community-based training and are expected to seek timely ad hoc support from their supervisor. Such ad hoc encounters are a mechanism for ensuring patient safety, but also…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Vocational Education, Training, Patients
Chitpin, Jeremy Sebastian; Chitpin, Stephanie – International Journal of Educational Management, 2017
Purpose: Through a series of critical discussions on Karl Popper's evolutionary analysis of learning and the non-authoritarian values it promotes, the purpose of this paper is to advocate a Popperian approach for building medical student knowledge. Specifically, it challenges positivist assumptions that permeate the design and management of many…
Descriptors: Medical Students, Graduate Medical Education, Guidelines, Hospitals
Zayapragassarazan, Zayabalaradjane; Kumar, Santosh; Kadambari, Dharanipragada – Online Submission, 2019
In order to make the existing MBBS curriculum more effective as per the health care needs of the nation, Medical Council of India (MCI) has taken a bold step by proposing new teaching-learning approaches including a structured longitudinal programme on attitude, ethics and communication, which is named as the Attitude, Ethics and Communication…
Descriptors: Health Services, Medical Education, Teaching Methods, Ethics
Donetto, Sara – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2012
In the last two decades, undergraduate medical education in the United Kingdom has undergone several important changes. Many of these have revolved around a paradigmatic shift from "paternalistic" to "patient-centred" approaches to healthcare. Adopting a Foucauldian understanding of power and borrowing from Freire's critical…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Medical Students, Critical Theory, Medical Schools