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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

Showing 1 to 15 of 151 results
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LeBlanc, Vicki R.; McConnell, Meghan M.; Monteiro, Sandra D. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2015
Healthcare practice and education are highly emotional endeavors. While this is recognized by educators and researchers seeking to develop interventions aimed at improving wellness in health professionals and at providing them with skills to deal with emotional interpersonal situations, the field of health professions education has largely ignored…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Interpersonal Relationship, Cognitive Processes, Allied Health Personnel
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Rees-Lee, Jacqueline; Kneebone, Roger – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2015
Competency based surgical training uses proficiency of technical skills to quantify surgical competency. We believe this is an over simplification of what is required to be a competent surgeon. This work aims to illuminate the attributes of a mature, competent, thinking surgeon. A bespoke (or custom) tailor is highly trained craftsman who produces…
Descriptors: Surgery, Physicians, Interviews, Observation
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Haji, Faizal A.; Hoppe, Daniel J.; Morin, Marie-Paule; Giannoulakis, Konstantine; Koh, Jansen; Rojas, David; Cheung, Jeffrey J. H. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2014
Rapid technological advances and concern for patient safety have increased the focus on simulation as a pedagogical tool for educating health care providers. To date, simulation research scholarship has focused on two areas; evaluating instructional designs of simulation programs, and the integration of simulation into a broader educational…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Simulation, Research Methodology, Teaching Methods
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Wood, Timothy J. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2014
Medical education relies heavily on assessment formats that require raters to assess the competence and skills of learners. Unfortunately, there are often inconsistencies and variability in the scores raters assign. To ensure the scores from these assessment tools have validity, it is important to understand the underlying cognitive processes that…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Interrater Reliability, Cognitive Processes, Validity
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Prout, Sarah; Lin, Ivan; Nattabi, Barbara; Green, Charmaine – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2014
Health indicators for rural populations in Australia continue to lag behind those of urban populations and particularly for Indigenous populations who make up a large proportion of people living in rural and remote Australia. Preparation of health practitioners who are adequately prepared to face the "messy swamps" of rural health…
Descriptors: Transformative Learning, Rural Areas, Indigenous Populations, Allied Health Personnel
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Hilberts, Sonya; Gray, Kathleen – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2014
This paper explores the role of education as infrastructure in large-scale ehealth strategies--in theory, in international practice and in one national case study. Education is often invisible in the documentation of ehealth infrastructure. Nevertheless a review of international practice shows that there is significant educational investment made…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Case Studies, Health Education, Evidence
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Hauer, Karen E.; ten Cate, Olle; Boscardin, Christy; Irby, David M.; Iobst, William; O'Sullivan, Patricia S. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2014
Clinical supervision requires that supervisors make decisions about how much independence to allow their trainees for patient care tasks. The simultaneous goals of ensuring quality patient care and affording trainees appropriate and progressively greater responsibility require that the supervising physician trusts the trainee. Trust allows the…
Descriptors: Trust (Psychology), Workplace Learning, Supervision, Supervisory Methods
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Dahnke, Michael D. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2014
Codes of ethics abound in health care, the aims and purposes of which are multiple and varied, from operating as a decision making tool to acting as a standard of practice that can be operational in a legal context to providing a sense of elevated seriousness and professionalism within a field of practice. There is some doubt and controversy,…
Descriptors: Ethics, Allied Health Occupations Education, Ethical Instruction, Health Services
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Benbassat, Jochanan – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2014
Background: Educators are concerned by the high prevalence of emotional distress among medical students, and by the alleged decline in their humanitarian values. Objective To re-examine these concerns by reviewing studies of medical students' wellbeing and development. Method Narrative review of the literature. Main findings: (a) Medical…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Undergraduate Students, Well Being, Values
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Paul, David; Ewen, Shaun C.; Jones, Rhys – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2014
The concept of cultural competence has become reified by inclusion as an accreditation standard in the US and Canada, in New Zealand it is demanded through an Act of Parliament, and it pervades discussion in Australian medical education discourse. However, there is evidence that medical graduates feel poorly prepared to deliver cross-cultural care…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Cultural Pluralism, Taxonomy, Hidden Curriculum
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Benbassat, Jochanan – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2013
The objective of this narrative review of the literature is to draw attention to four undesirable features of the medical learning environment (MLE). First, students' fears of personal inadequacy and making errors are enhanced rather than alleviated by the hidden curriculum of the clinical teaching setting; second, the MLE projects a denial…
Descriptors: Medical Students, Medical Education, Teacher Student Relationship, Hidden Curriculum
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ten Cate, Olle Th. J. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2013
Providing feedback to trainees in clinical settings is considered important for development and acquisition of skill. Despite recommendations how to provide feedback that have appeared in the literature, research shows that its effectiveness is often disappointing. To understand why receiving feedback is more difficult than it appears, this paper…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Skill Development, Instructional Effectiveness, Theories
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Schrewe, Brett – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2013
More than 100 years following its publication, the Flexner Report endures as a principal text in contemporary medical education. While recent scholarship has questioned popular conceptions of the report and attends to marginalized passages, explanations as to why the Flexner story endures as myth in medical education remain absent in the…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Educational Change, Educational History, Reports
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de Feijter, Jeantine M.; de Grave, Willem S.; Koopmans, Richard P.; Scherpbier, Albert J. J. A. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2013
Learning from error is not just an individual endeavour. Organisations also learn from error. Hospitals provide many learning opportunities, which can be formal or informal. Informal learning from error in hospitals has not been researched in much depth so this narrative review focuses on five learning opportunities: morbidity and mortality…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Hospitals, Workplace Learning, Error Correction
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Byrne, Aidan – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2013
The decision making process is central to the practice of a clinician and has traditionally been described in terms of the hypothetico-deductive model. More recently, models adapted from cognitive psychology, such as the dual process and script theories have proved useful in explaining patterns of practice not consistent with purely cognitive…
Descriptors: Physician Patient Relationship, Patients, Decision Making, Psychological Evaluation
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