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Sacristan, Dolly; Martinez, Colleen D. – Journal of Teaching in Social Work, 2023
Social work educators are compelled to use reliable and valid methods to assess student learning outcomes. This study adapted a clinical simulation by integrating traditional role-play of case scenarios and elements of the Objective Structured Clinical Examination, which is often used to assess students' practice skills. Master of Social Work…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Counselor Training, Masters Programs, Clinical Experience
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Bintley, Helen L.; Bell, Alexander; Ashworth, Rachel – Advances in Physiology Education, 2019
Evidence shows that biomedical knowledge is more effectively taught within the medical curriculum by teaching in context, to facilitate learning transfer. The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the effect of combining high-technology simulation and physiology teaching on medical student learning and experience. First-year medical…
Descriptors: Physiology, Clinical Experience, Medical Education, Technology Integration
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Gillette, Cordial M. – Athletic Training Education Journal, 2017
Context: Athletic training educators are faced with the tasks of assessing learning styles, preparing and delivering content, and assessing student learning. Within content delivery, some educators may subscribe to certain learning theories and teaching strategies. One teaching strategy that holds potential for athletic training education is…
Descriptors: Athletics, Teaching Methods, Problem Based Learning, Learning Activities
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Marshak, David W.; Oakes, Joanne; Hsieh, Pei-Hsuan; Chuang, Alice Z.; Cleary, Leonard J. – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2015
At the University of Texas Houston Medical School, a rotational dissection system was introduced to improve coordination between the Gross Anatomy and the Introduction to Clinical Medicine (ICM) courses. Six students were assigned to each cadaver and divided into two teams. For each laboratory, one team was assigned to dissect and the other to…
Descriptors: Anatomy, Medical Education, Science Laboratories, Teaching Methods
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Vekemans, Herlinda – Language Learning in Higher Education, 2016
In the last few decades the medical community has increasingly underlined the necessity for medical students and healthcare professionals to acquire adequate and patient-friendly medical language and communication skills. Although teachers of foreign languages for medical purposes are usually not medically trained, their learners present them with…
Descriptors: Medical Education, English for Special Purposes, Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction
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Duvivier, Robbert J.; van Geel, Koos; van Dalen, Jan; Scherpbier, Albert J. J. A.; van der Vleuten, Cees P. M. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2012
Lack of published studies on students' practice behaviour of physical examination skills outside timetabled training sessions inspired this study into what activities medical students undertake to improve their skills and factors influencing this. Six focus groups of a total of 52 students from Years 1-3 using a pre-established interview guide.…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Medical Students, Textbooks, Physical Examinations
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Zhang, Zhidong; Lu, Jingyan – International Education Studies, 2014
The changes of learning environments and the advancement of learning theories have increasingly demanded for feedback that can describe learning progress trajectories. Effective assessment should be able to evaluate how learners acquire knowledge and develop problem solving skills. Additionally, it should identify what issues these learners have…
Descriptors: Medical Students, Student Evaluation, Feedback (Response), Task Analysis
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Benbassat, Jochanan; Baumal, Reuben – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2009
The objective of this paper is to draw attention to four features that distinguish the pedagogy of patient interviewing from the teaching of other clinical skills: (a) students are not naive to the skill to be learned, (b) they encounter role models with a wide variability in interviewing styles, (c) clinical teachers are not usually specialists…
Descriptors: Patients, Teaching Methods, Medical Students, Role Models
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Cohen, Steven N.; Silvestri, Anthony R., Jr. – Journal of Dental Education, 1980
A teaching technique for evaluating student technical exercises is described. The technique enables the faculty to describe the student's performance, as well as to score it. A student survey revealed that the majority of students could accurately interpret the information contained on the form. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: Clinical Experience, Dentistry, Feedback, Grading
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Rumsey, Karla E.; Rumsey, Jay M. – Journal of Optometric Education, 1989
A specially designed patient assessment diagram is proposed as a means of helping optometric student clinicians develop integrative skills in the assessment and management of the patient's problem. A pilot study found students supportive of its use. (MSE)
Descriptors: Clinical Diagnosis, Clinical Experience, Diagrams, Higher Education
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Srinivasan, Malathi; Hwang, Judith C.; West, Daniel; Yellowlees, Peter M. – Academic Psychiatry, 2006
Objective: Simulation technologies are used to assess and teach competencies through the provision of reproducible stimuli. They have exceptional utility in assessing responses to clinical stimuli that occur sporadically or infrequently. In this article, the authors describe the utility of emerging simulation technologies, and discuss critical…
Descriptors: Psychiatry, Graduate Medical Education, Student Evaluation, Computer Simulation
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And Others; Stillman, Paula L. – Journal of Medical Education, 1981
A collaborative study between two medical schools to evaluate the teaching of physical examination skills to medical students, assess the effect of different instructional methods, and improve teaching programs is presented. Students at the two schools were videotaped and the videotapes were sent to a third school for independent evaluation.…
Descriptors: Clinical Experience, Cooperative Programs, Higher Education, Medical Students
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Rakestraw, Philip G.; And Others – Journal of Medical Education, 1983
Four instructional designs to teach pelvic examinations to second-year medical students were compared: traditional sequence, and practice in premotor, postmotor, and combined premotor and postmotor skill development. Mental practice produced better performance on the abilities to list the examination sequence and record findings. (Author/MSE)
Descriptors: Clinical Experience, Cognitive Processes, Gynecology, Higher Education
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Love, David W.; And Others – American Journal of Pharmaceutical Education, 1981
The College of Medicine, University of Kentucky, engaged in an innovative, intense approach to clerkship curriculum development based on the nominal group process. The nominal group process is defined as a method of soliciting ideas and constructive input from experts with differing backgrounds and perceptions. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: Clinical Experience, Competence, Course Content, Course Descriptions
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Schwartz, Richard W.; And Others – Academic Medicine, 1994
A study of 88 students in a problem-based surgery clerkship found significant gain in knowledge level, found to be linked to improved clinical performance. Additional findings included peers were good judges of students' knowledge and skills; faculty were not good judges of changes in student skills or ability to apply them. (MSE)
Descriptors: Achievement Gains, Clinical Experience, Higher Education, Instructional Effectiveness
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