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Hancock, Jason; Roberts, Martin; Monrouxe, Lynn; Mattick, Karen – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2015
The practice of medicine involves inherent ambiguity, arising from limitations of knowledge, diagnostic problems, complexities of treatment and outcome and unpredictability of patient response. Research into doctors' tolerance of ambiguity is hampered by poor conceptual clarity and inadequate measurement scales. We aimed to create and pilot a…
Descriptors: Medical Students, Physicians, Entry Workers, Ambiguity (Context)
Baxter, Lisa; Mattick, Karen; Kuyken, Willem – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2013
Inventories that measure approaches to learning have revealed that certain approaches are associated with better academic performance. However, these inventories were developed primarily with higher education students on non-vocational courses and recent research shows they fail to capture the full range of healthcare students' intentions and…
Descriptors: Medical Students, Learning Motivation, Intention, Measures (Individuals)
Mattick, Karen; Barnes, Rebecca; Dieppe, Paul – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2013
Previous debate has explored whether medical education research should become more like health services research in terms of frameworks, collaborations and methodologies. Notable recent changes in health services research include an increasing emphasis on complex interventions, defined as interventions that involve more than one component. The…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Intervention, Educational Research, Medical Research
Wade, Louise; Harrison, Chris; Hollands, James; Mattick, Karen; Ricketts, Chris; Wass, Val – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2012
Background: The Progress Test (PT) was developed to assess student learning within integrated curricula. Whilst it is effective in promoting and rewarding deep approaches to learning in some settings, we hypothesised that implementation of the curriculum (design and assessment) may impact on students' preparation for the PT and their learning.…
Descriptors: Tests, Evaluation, Medical Students, Medical Schools
de Bere, Sam Regan; Mattick, Karen – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2010
Developments in clinical education have recently challenged the identity of anatomy teaching and learning, leading to high profile debate over the potential implications for the competence levels of new doctors. However, the emphasis remains on methods of teaching, rather than a review of what well-rounded anatomical learning actually entails, and…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Medical Students, Curriculum Design, Qualitative Research
Mattick, Karen; Knight, Lynn – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2009
Having performed research using approaches to learning and studying inventories and become familiar with the concepts they purport to measure, the authors were concerned that existing inventories might not capture the full range of "intentions" and "motivations" for learning that exist within populations of medical students. We used…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Medical Students, Student Attitudes, Interviews
Mattick, Karen; Crocker, Graham; Bligh, John – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2007
The General Medical Council in the UK recommends that undergraduate medical students be exposed to a variety of learning opportunities and increasingly take responsibility for their own learning. This study presents quantitative and qualitative data relating to attendance at non-compulsory plenary lectures in order to understand factors affecting…
Descriptors: Medical Students, Academic Achievement, Public Health, Attendance

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