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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 87 results
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Naveh, Eitan; Katz-Navon, Tal; Stern, Zvi – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2015
Resident physicians' clinical training poses unique challenges for the delivery of safe patient care. Residents face special risks of involvement in medical errors since they have tremendous responsibility for patient care, yet they are novice practitioners in the process of learning and mastering their profession. The present study explores…
Descriptors: Physicians, Graduate Students, Medical Students, Error Patterns
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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)
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Essers, Geurt; Dielissen, Patrick; van Weel, Chris; van der Vleuten, Cees; van Dulmen, Sandra; Kramer, Anneke – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2015
Communication assessment in real-life consultations is a complex task. Generic assessment instruments help but may also have disadvantages. The generic nature of the skills being assessed does not provide indications for context-specific behaviour required in practice situations; context influences are mostly taken into account implicitly. Our…
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Context Effect, Evaluators, Qualitative Research
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Willing, Sonja; Ostapczuk, Martin; Musch, Jochen – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2015
Testwiseness--that is, the ability to find subtle cues towards the solution by the simultaneous comparison of the available answer options--threatens the validity of multiple-choice (MC) tests. Discrete-option multiple-choice (DOMC) has recently been proposed as a computerized alternative testing format for MC tests, and presumably allows for a…
Descriptors: Test Wiseness, Multiple Choice Tests, Cues, Adults
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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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Fiordelli, Maddalena; Schulz, Peter J.; Caiata Zufferey, Maria – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2014
A good collaboration between health professionals is considered to have benefits for patients, healthcare staff, and organizations. Nevertheless, effective interprofessional collaboration is difficult to achieve. This is particularly true for collaboration between Medical Residents (MRs) and the immediate colleagues they interact with, as Senior…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Medical Students, Medical Education, Physicians
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van der Zwet, J.; Dornan, T.; Teunissen, P. W.; de Jonge, L. P. J. W. M.; Scherpbier, A. J. J. A. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2014
Work based learning and teaching in health care settings are complex and dynamic. Sociocultural theory addresses this complexity by focusing on interaction between learners, teachers, and their environment as learners develop their professional identity. Although social interaction between doctors and students plays a crucial role in this…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Medical Students, Teacher Student Relationship, Physicians
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Young, Meredith E.; Cruess, Sylvia R.; Cruess, Richard L.; Steinert, Yvonne – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2014
Physicians function as clinicians, teachers, and role models within the clinical environment. Negative learning environments have been shown to be due to many factors, including the presence of unprofessional behaviors among clinical teachers. Reliable and valid assessments of clinical teacher performance, including professional behaviors, may…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Medical Education, Medical Students, Teacher Evaluation
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Isaac, Carol; Byars-Winston, Angela; McSorley, Rebecca; Schultz, Alexandra; Kaatz, Anna; Carnes, Mary L. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2014
The high attrition rate of female physicians pursuing an academic medicine research career has not been examined in the context of career development theory. We explored how internal medicine residents and faculty experience their work within the context of their broader life domain in order to identify strategies for facilitating career…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Internal Medicine, Career Development, Medical Research
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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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Vanstone, Meredith; Watling, Christopher; Goldszmidt, Mark; Weijer, Charles; Lingard, Lorelei – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2014
A growing group of inpatients on acute clinical teaching units have non-acute needs, yet require attention by the team. While anecdotally, these patients have inspired frustration and resource pressures in clinical settings, little is known about the ways in which they influence physician perceptions of the learning environment. This qualitative…
Descriptors: Patients, Graduate Medical Education, Clinical Teaching (Health Professions), Physicians
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Schmit Jongbloed, Lodewijk J.; Schönrock-Adema, Johanna; Borleffs, Jan C. C.; Stewart, Roy E.; Cohen-Schotanus, Janke – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2014
In this longitudinal study, we investigated the relationship between physicians' prior achievements (before, during and after medical school) and job satisfaction, and tested the two lines of reasoning that prior achievements influence job satisfaction positively or negatively, respectively. The participants were graduates who started their…
Descriptors: Physicians, Job Satisfaction, Longitudinal Studies, Achievement
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Dornan, Tim; Tan, Naomi; Boshuizen, Henny; Gick, Rachel; Isba, Rachel; Mann, Karen; Scherpbier, Albert; Spencer, John; Timmins, Elizabeth – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2014
Clerkship education has been called a "black box" because so little is known about what, how, and under which conditions students learn. Our aim was to develop a blueprint for education in ambulatory and inpatient settings, and in single encounters, traditional rotations, or longitudinal experiences. We identified 548 causal links…
Descriptors: Clinical Experience, Medical Students, Experiential Learning, Learning Theories
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Bernabeo, E. C.; Holmboe, E. S.; Ross, K.; Chesluk, B.; Ginsburg, S. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2013
Professionalism remains a substantive theme in medical literature. There is an emerging emphasis on sociological and complex adaptive systems perspectives that refocuses attention from just the individual role to working within one's system to enact professionalism in practice. Reflecting on responses to professional dilemmas may be one…
Descriptors: Physicians, Vignettes, Focus Groups, Interpersonal Communication
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Tait, Glendon R.; Hodges, Brian D. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2013
For patients at the end of life, it is crucial to address the psychological, existential, and spiritual distress of patients. Medical education research suggests trainees feel unprepared to provide the whole person, humanistic care held as the ideal. This study used an empirically based narrative intervention, the dignity interview, as an…
Descriptors: Death, Medical Students, Holistic Approach, Interviews
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