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Kayla Pavlick; Casey Boothe; Andrew Notebaert – HAPS Educator, 2024
While program-level learning objectives are required for medical school accreditation, session-level learning objectives are not, although many institutions use them. Most pre-clerkship basic science medical educators (PCBSMEs) do not have formal pedagogy training, so it is unknown when PCBSMEs learn about learning objectives or how they…
Descriptors: Educational Objectives, Medical Education, Medical Schools, Medical School Faculty
Chin, Melissa; Pack, Rachael; Cristancho, Sayra – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2023
The centrality of entrustable professional activities (EPAs) in competency-based medical education (CBME) is predicated on the assumption that low-stakes, high-frequency workplace-based assessments used in a programmatic approach will result in accurate and defensible judgments of competence. While there have been conversations in the literature…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Competency Based Education, Workplace Learning, Performance Based Assessment
Khan, Rehan Ahmed; Spruijt, Annemarie; Mahboob, Usman; Al Eraky, Mohamed; van Merrienboer, Jeroen J. G. – Innovations in Education and Teaching International, 2023
Perceptions of teachers and students about curriculum viability inhibitors are equally important yet may differ. Divergence can lead to destructive friction and adversely affect curriculum viability. Our team aimed to find the perceptions of teachers and students on inhibitors affecting the viability of an implemented medical curriculum, report…
Descriptors: Medical Students, Medical School Faculty, Student Attitudes, Teacher Attitudes
M. Jane Burns – Online Submission, 2025
Surgeons, given their knowledge, skills, and experience in patient care, are often the primary educators of residents, fellows, and practicing surgeons. However, their lack of formal training in instructional practices may limit their effectiveness in the classroom. This study examined the importance of faculty development for surgeon educators…
Descriptors: Surgery, Physicians, Faculty Development, Medical Education
Joshua Moen; Chloe Shuck – Discover Education, 2024
In recent decades, medical education has been grappling with two significant challenges: the increasing prevalence of burnout among learners at all levels and the concerning trend of industry bias, low-quality evidence, and expert-based opinion driving clinical practice guidelines. To address these issues, a critical evaluation of the medical…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Medical School Faculty, Teaching Methods, Incidence
Shaw, Tammy; Wood, Timothy J.; Touchie, Claire; Pugh, Debra; Humphrey-Murto, Susan M. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2021
Learner handover (LH), the process of sharing of information about learners between faculty supervisors, allows for longitudinal assessment fundamental in the competency-based education model. However, the potential to bias future assessments has been raised as a concern. The purpose of this study is to determine whether prior performance…
Descriptors: Bias, Prior Learning, Physicians, Student Evaluation
Thomas, Larissa R.; Roesch, Justin; Haber, Lawrence; Rendón, Patrick; Chang, Anna; Timm, Craig; Kalishman, Summers; O'Sullivan, Patricia – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2020
Aspiring medical educators and their advisors often lack clarity about career paths. To provide guidance to faculty pursuing careers as educators, we sought to explore perceived factors that contributed to the career development of outstanding medical educators. Using a thematic analysis, investigators at two institutions interviewed 39 full or…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Medical School Faculty, Teacher Effectiveness, Career Development
Kelly Erickson; Serena Hutson – Journal of Occupational Therapy Education, 2023
This study explored how a revised on-campus occupational therapy clinic model impacted occupational therapy graduate student professional development and clinical practice educator confidence in areas related to the on-campus clinic environment, professionalism, student learning, and collaboration. Specifically, clinical practice educator and…
Descriptors: Occupational Therapy, Clinics, On Campus Students, Graduate Students
Rame, Ana; Kelly-Turner, Kenna; Roze des Ordons, Amanda; de Groot, Janet; Keegan, David; Crowshoe, Lynden; Henderson, Rita; Roach, Pamela – Health Education Journal, 2023
Objective: To examine experiences of anti-Indigenous racism in a Canadian medical school and inform the development of critical and action-oriented Indigenous health education necessary to pave the way for reconciliation within health systems. Design: A qualitative study conducted within a constructivist paradigm which involved: (1)…
Descriptors: Racism, Medical Schools, Indigenous Knowledge, Cultural Relevance
AlTarawneh, Mohammad Qasim; AlMithqal, Eyad Ahmad – Online Submission, 2019
This study aimed at investigating the perceptions of using first language (Arabic) in the ESP classroom from the viewpoints of both students and teachers of the Preparatory Year Department at an applied medical college in Saudi Arabia. It also intended to find out if there were significant differences in perceptions according to variables like…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, Student Attitudes, English for Special Purposes, Medical Students
Gupta, Akriti; Singh, Satendra; Khaliq, Farah; Dhaliwal, Upreet; Madhu, S. V. – Advances in Physiology Education, 2018
In the country presently, preclinical medical students are not routinely exposed to real patients. Thus, when they start clinical postings, they are found to have poor clinical reasoning skills. Simulated virtual patients (SVPs) can improve clinical skills without endangering real patients. This pilot study describes the development of two SVPs in…
Descriptors: Computer Simulation, Patients, Clinical Experience, Physiology
van Lankveld, T.; Schoonenboom, J.; Kusurkar, R. A.; Volman, M.; Beishuizen, J.; Croiset, G. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2017
Beginning medical teachers often see themselves as doctors or researchers rather than as teachers. Using both figured worlds theory and dialogical self theory, this study explores how beginning teachers in the field of undergraduate medical education integrate the teacher role into their identity. A qualitative study was performed, involving 18…
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Medical School Faculty, Professional Identity, Undergraduate Study
Hopper, Mari K.; Kaiser, Alexis N. – Advances in Physiology Education, 2018
The primary aim of this study was to determine whether levels of student engagement, higher order skill proficiency, and knowledge acquisition demonstrated by medical students would differ when completing the same course in three diverse learning environments. Following Institutional Review Board approval, 56 first-year medical students,…
Descriptors: Physiology, Science Instruction, Thinking Skills, Learner Engagement
Polreis, Sean; D'Eon, Marcel F.; Premkumar, Kalyani; Trinder, Krista; Bonnycastle, Deirdre – Journal of Faculty Development, 2015
Resident doctors have an important and integral responsibility of teaching a number of individuals. The purpose of this study was to measure the effectiveness of the University of Saskatchewan's resident-as-teacher training course--Teaching Improvement Project Systems (TIPS). Residents who attended the TIPS course from January, 2010 through June,…
Descriptors: Teaching Skills, Faculty Development, Training, Microteaching
Sandhu, Gurjit; Rich, Jessica V.; Magas, Christopher; Walker, G. Ross – Canadian Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2015
Research in the area of role modeling has primarily focused on the qualities and attributes of exceptional role models, and less attention has been given to the act of role modeling itself (Elzubeir & Rizk, 2001; Jochemsen-van der Leeuw, van Dijk, van Etten-Jamaludin, & Wieringa-de Waard, 2013; Wright, 1996; Wright, Wong, & Newill,…
Descriptors: Role Models, Medical Education, Medical School Faculty, Teacher Attitudes