keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38615688/twelve-tips-for-supporting-medical-learners-through-high-stakes-assessment-challenges
#1
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rachel W Moquin, Brian Pinney
Learners across the medical education continuum will encounter numerous high-stakes exams and assessments. Effectively preparing for and performing well on these types of assessments can be challenging for learners for a wide variety of reasons. It is imperative that medical educators provide appropriate support for learners who experience challenges with high-stakes exams, particularly given the complexity of factors like life circumstances of individual learners and the significance of these assessments for career advancement/progression...
April 14, 2024: Medical Teacher
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38588719/twelve-tips-for-developing-and-implementing-an-effective-critical-care-simulation-programme
#2
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Aidan T O'Dowd, Natalie L McEvoy, Christopher Read, Dara O'Keeffe, Gerard F Curley
Simulation training in healthcare settings has become a valuable training tool. It provides an ideal formative assessment for interdisciplinary teaching. It provides a high fidelity and highly immersive environment where healthcare staff and students can practice developing their skills in a safe and controlled manner. Simulation training allows staff to practice skills that better prepare them for clinical emergencies, therefore possibly optimising clinical care. While the benefits of simulation education are well understood, establishing a programme for use by critical care staff is complex...
April 8, 2024: Medical Teacher
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38508199/twelve-tips-for-maximizing-the-potential-of-reflective-writing-in-medical-education
#3
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tracy Moniz, Carolyn M Melro, Andrew Warren, Chris Watling
Reflective writing (RW) is a popular tool in medical education, but it is being used in ways that fail to maximize its potential. Literature in the field focuses on why RW is used - that is to develop, assess, and remediate learner competencies - but less so on how to use it effectively. The emerging literature on how to integrate RW in medical education is haphazard, scattered and, at times, reductionist. We need a synthesis to translate this literature into cohesive strategies for medical educators using RW in a variety of contexts...
March 20, 2024: Medical Teacher
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38484293/twelve-tips-for-developing-effective-marking-schemes-for-constructed-response-examination-questions
#4
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Neville G Chiavaroli, Jacob Pearce
Constructed-response questions (CRQs) require effective marking schemes to ensure that the intended learning objectives and/or professional competencies are appropriately addressed, and valid inferences regarding examinee competence are drawn from such assessments. While the educational literature on writing rubrics has proliferated in recent years, this is largely targeted at classroom use and formative purposes. There is comparatively little guidance on how to develop appropriate marking schemes for summative assessment contexts...
March 14, 2024: Medical Teacher
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38478983/twelve-tips-for-orienting-preclinical-healthcare-students-to-simulation-education
#5
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Aimee T Martin, Kimberlee P Giffen
Simulation-based education (SBE) is common in healthcare education and is increasingly being incorporated in preclinical curriculum. Preclinical students typically have had little exposure to the clinical setting (i.e. hospital patient rooms, equipment) and often feel uncomfortable when first placed in the simulated clinical environment. Prebriefing, a standard of best practice in simulation, prepares learners for simulation exercises. To successfully integrate SBE in preclinical education, we recommend expanding the prebriefing to include: multiple activities that orient learners to the learning space and the structure of a simulation activity, the goals of simulation as a learning process, faculty modeling of a simulated patient encounter, and expected learner outcomes...
March 13, 2024: Medical Teacher
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38422994/twelve-tips-for-teaching-culturally-and-socially-responsive-care-to-medical-students
#6
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Julia R Van Liew, Cassandra Lai, Lisa Streyffeler
In recent years, discourse on topics like cultural humility, social determinants of health (SDOH), and health disparities and inequities has greatly increased in medical education as attention to their impact on health has magnified. Unfortunately, traditional medical education models may fail to optimize learning in this area. To address these complex social health issues, we must find innovative ways to engage students in an educational partnership in which they are challenged to critically think and reflect on their attitudes, role, and actions in health equity and culturally responsive care...
February 29, 2024: Medical Teacher
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38295433/twelve-tips-for-designing-and-implementing-an-academic-coaching-program
#7
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Svetlana M King, Shafeena Anas, Ricardo Carnicer Hijazo, Johanna Jordaan, Jean D F Potter, Naomi Low-Beer
Coaching has become increasingly popular as a mechanism to support learning across the health professions education (HPE) continuum. While there is a growing body of literature in this area, there is minimal guidance related to the design and implementation of academic coaching in health professional courses. This paper seeks to contribute to this literature by presenting guidance for academic developers who are considering introducing academic coaching into a health professional course. The 12 tips are based on the authors' collective experiences of designing and implementing academic coaching in university medical courses in Australia and the UK...
January 31, 2024: Medical Teacher
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38285894/twelve-tips-on-creating-and-using-custom-gpts-to-enhance-health-professions-education
#8
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ken Masters, Jennifer Benjamin, Anoop Agrawal, Heather MacNeill, M Tyson Pillow, Neil Mehta
The custom GPT is the latest powerful feature added to ChatGPT. Non-programmers can create and share their own GPTs ("chat bots"), allowing Health Professions Educators to apply the capabilities of ChatGPT to create administrative assistants, online tutors, virtual patients, and more, to support their clinical and non-clinical teaching environments. To achieve this correctly, however, requires some skills, and this 12-Tips paper provides those: we explain how to construct data sources, build relevant GPTs, and apply some basic security...
January 29, 2024: Medical Teacher
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38146711/twelve-tips-to-leverage-ai-for-efficient-and-effective-medical-question-generation-a-guide-for-educators-using-chat-gpt
#9
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Inthrani Raja Indran, Priya Paramanathan, Neelima Gupta, Nurulhuda Mustafa
BACKGROUND: Crafting quality assessment questions in medical education is a crucial yet time-consuming, expertise-driven undertaking that calls for innovative solutions. Large language models (LLMs), such as ChatGPT (Chat Generative Pre-Trained Transformer), present a promising yet underexplored avenue for such innovations. AIMS: This study explores the utility of ChatGPT to generate diverse, high-quality medical questions, focusing on multiple-choice questions (MCQs) as an illustrative example, to increase educator's productivity and enable self-directed learning for students...
December 26, 2023: Medical Teacher
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38065689/twelve-tips-for-medical-school-faculty-to-support-students-with-disabilities
#10
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mikio Hayashi, Timothy Rogers, Dorothy W Tolchin
As medical schools embrace diversity, it is increasingly acknowledged that medical students with disabilities must be welcome and supported in becoming physicians. Students should be able to ask for and receive reasonable accommodations to support their education. However, a practical shared approach to supporting medical students with disabilities is needed. The 12 tips in this article use sense-making theory as a framework to guide medical school faculty in supporting medical students with disabilities. The tips center on perceiving cues, creating interpretations, taking action, and communicating with students...
December 8, 2023: Medical Teacher
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38006603/twelve-tips-for-teaching-in-virtual-reality
#11
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Pedro Elston, Gian Paulo Canale, Geetika Ail, Nick Fisher, Mythili Mahendran
Virtual reality (VR) is a technology that is seeing increasing use in medical education as a means to complement or prepare students for clinical practice in a safe space. Whilst effective for learning, it can be difficult to use effectively and requires significant planning to avoid the technological tail wagging the educational dog. We have run educational sessions using the technology to teach anatomy and clinical reasoning that have been well received by students at Queen Mary, University of London. In this article, we share 12 practical tips from our experiences on how to create and deliver learning using VR...
November 25, 2023: Medical Teacher
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37976372/twelve-tips-for-creating-online-learning-units-for-the-health-professions-in-low-and-middle-income-countries
#12
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Karli Brittz, Yvonne Botma, Tanya Heyns
Health professions educators in low-and middle-income countries are often sceptical about developing online learning units. This scepticism stems from the belief that online programmes are limited in developing clinical competence, and there are concerns about digital proficiency and resource availability. A social constructivist approach in designing online work-based learning units may overcome such scepticism. In this article, we use our experience in developing an online learning unit for healthcare education to suggest 12 tips for developing online learning units in a low-and middle-income context...
November 17, 2023: Medical Teacher
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37688778/twelve-tips-for-designing-implementing-and-sustaining-interprofessional-training-units-on-hospital-wards
#13
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Saskia C M Oosterbaan-Lodder, Joyce Kors, Cora L F Visser, Birgitte Mørk Kvist, Rashmi A Kusurkar, Fedde Scheele
Dedicated Interprofessional Training Units (ITUs) in hospital wards are one way to prepare healthcare students for Interprofessional patient-centered care. Based on theoretical foundations, research, and our lived experiences of successes as well as failures, we propose 12 tips on how to prepare, implement, and sustain a dedicated ITU, combining the Grol & Wensing model for planning change with the Self-determination Theory of motivation. Start with a steering group, with a dedicated project leader, to translate awareness of the need for an ITU into wider awareness and motivation among stakeholders, with the ITU being a solution to authentic problems...
September 9, 2023: Medical Teacher
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37542358/twelve-tips-to-aid-interpretation-of-post-assessment-psychometric-reports
#14
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mohsen Tavakol, David G O'Brien, Claire C Sharpe, Claire Stewart
Post-assessments psychometric reports are a vital component of the assessment cycle to ensure that assessments are reliable, valid and fair to make appropriate pass-fail decisions. Students' scores can be summarised by examination of frequency distributions, central tendency measures and dispersion measures. Item discrimination indicies to assess the quality of items, and distractors that differentiate between students achieving or not achieving the learning outcomes are key. Estimating individual item reliability and item validity indices can maximise test-score reliability and validity...
August 4, 2023: Medical Teacher
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37243728/twelve-tips-for-providing-academic-remediation-to-widening-access-learners-in-medical-education
#15
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ashley Selva-Rodriguez, John Sandars
As medical schools expand access and diversity through widening access initiatives, there is an increasing need to provide academic remediation for learners during their first year in medical school. The previous educational experiences of widening access learners are often mismatched for continuing success in medical school. This article offers 12 tips for providing academic remediation to widening access learners and draws on insights from the learning sciences and research in psychosocial education to support academic development within a holistic framework...
October 2023: Medical Teacher
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37232165/twelve-tips-for-improving-the-quality-of-assessor-judgements-in-senior-medical-student-clinical-assessments
#16
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Bunmi S Malau-Aduli, Richard B Hays, Karen D'Souza, Shannon L Saad, Helen Rienits, Antonio Celenza, Rinki Murphy
Assessment of senior medical students is usually calibrated at the level of achieving expected learning outcomes for graduation. Recent research reveals that clinical assessors often balance two slightly different perspectives on this benchmark. The first is the formal learning outcomes at graduation, ideally as part of a systematic, program-wide assessment approach that measures learning achievement, while the second is consideration of the candidate's contribution to safe care and readiness for practice as a junior doctor...
May 26, 2023: Medical Teacher
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37105593/twelve-tips-for-optimising-learning-for-postgraduate-doctors-in-the-operating-theatre
#17
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Benjamin D Chatterton, Nikhil Sharma, Eliot L Rees, Lisa Hadfield-Law, Paul J Jermin, Robin Banerjee, Nigel T Kiely
Learning in the operating theatre forms a critical part of postgraduate medical education. Postgraduate doctors present a diverse cohort of learners with a wide range of learning needs that will vary by their level of experience and curriculum requirements. With evidence of both trainee dissatisfaction with the theatre learning experience and reduced time spent in the operating theatre, which has been exacerbated by the effects of the Covid-19 pandemic, it is vital that every visit to the operating theatre is used as a learning opportunity...
April 27, 2023: Medical Teacher
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37027517/twelve-tips-to-develop-entrustable-professional-activities
#18
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marije P Hennus, Jennie B Jarrett, David R Taylor, Olle Ten Cate
Entrustable professional activities (EPAs), units of professional practice that require proficient integration of multiple competencies and can be entrusted to a sufficiently competent learner, are increasingly being used to define and inform curricula of health care professionals. The process of developing EPAs can be challenging and requires a deep yet pragmatic understanding of the concepts underlying EPA construction. Based on recent literature and the authors' lessons learned, this article provides the following practical and more or less sequential recommendations for developing EPAs: [1] Assemble a core team; [2] Build up expertise; [3] Establish a shared understanding of the purpose of EPAs; [4] Draft preliminary EPAs; [5] Elaborate EPAs; [6] Adopt a framework of supervision; [7] Perform a structured quality check; [8] Use a Delphi approach for refinement and/or consensus; [9] Pilot test EPAs; [10] Attune EPAs to their feasibility in assessment; [11] Map EPAs to existing curriculum; [12] Build a revision plan...
July 2023: Medical Teacher
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35868011/twelve-tips-for-teaching-neuroanatomy-from-the-medical-students-perspective
#19
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sanskrithi Sravanam, Chloë Jacklin, Eoghan McNelis, Kwan Wai Fung, Lucy Xu
Neuroanatomy is a complex and fascinating subject that is often a daunting prospect for medical students. In fact, the fear of learning neuroanatomy has gained its own name - "neurophobia." This widespread phenomenon among medical students poses a challenge to medical teachers and educators. To tackle "neurophobia" by summarising tips for dynamic and engaging neuroanatomy teaching formulated based on our experiences as medical students and evidence-based techniques.Focusing on the anatomical, physiological, and clinical aspects of neurology and their integration, here we present 12 tips which are [1] Teach the basic structure before fine details, [2] Supplement teaching with annotated diagrams, [3] Use dissections for haptic learning, [4] Teach form and function together, [5] Group anatomy into systems, [6] Familiarise students with neuroimaging, [7] Teach from clinical cases, [8] Let the patient become the teacher, [9] Build from first principles, [10] Try working in reverse, [11] Let the student become the teacher, [12] Let the student become the examiner...
May 2023: Medical Teacher
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35068063/decision-making-tips-for-patients-with-dementia
#20
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Roger P Worthington, Richard Tunnell, Amit Arora
BACKGROUND: When patients with advanced dementia lose capacity to make medical decisions for themselves, a 'best interests' determination is usually made on their behalf by the responsible clinician. Where possible, this should be made in consultation with members of the multiprofessional team and the family, consistent with ethical and legal norms. This paper is about multidisciplinary approaches to education and practice in dementia care, using a framework. APPROACH: At a UK multiprofessional workshop in 2020, delegates discussed ethical and legal issues that arise when making decisions for patients with advanced dementia...
April 2022: Clinical Teacher
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