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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 151 to 165 of 536 results
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Brutkiewicz, Randy R. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2012
What does it take to be successful as a tenure-track research faculty member in a School of Medicine? What are the elements necessary to run a successful laboratory? How does one find the resources and help to know what is important for promotion and tenure? Most training in graduate school or in clinical fellowships does not answer these…
Descriptors: Tenure, Medical Schools, Faculty Development, College Faculty
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Gallagher, Ruth M.; Gallagher, Helen C. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2012
Despite their common history, there are many cultural, attitudinal and practical differences between the professions of medicine and pharmacy that ultimately influence patient care and health outcomes. While poor communication between doctors and pharmacists is a major cause of medical errors, it is clear that effective, deliberate…
Descriptors: Pharmaceutical Education, Medical Students, Hospitals, Chronic Illness
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Chang, E-shien; Simon, Melissa; Dong, XinQi – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2012
As US populations become increasing diverse, healthcare professionals are facing a heightened challenge to provide cross-cultural care. To date, medical education around the world has developed specific curricula on cultural competence training in acknowledgement of the importance of culturally sensitive and grounded services. This article…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Patients, Values, Chinese Americans
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Masiello, Italo – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2012
Advanced medical education simulators are broadly used today to train both technical/procedural and team-based skills. While there is convincing evidence of the benefits of training technical skills, this is not the case for team-based skills. Research on medical expertise could drive the creation of a new regime of simulation-based team training.…
Descriptors: Expertise, Evidence, Medical Education, Team Training
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Qureshi, Zeshan; Maxwell, Simon – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2012
Though a diverse array of teaching methods is now available, bedside teaching is arguably the most favoured. Students like it because it is patient-centred, and it includes a high proportion of relevant skills. It is on the decline, coinciding with declining clinical skills of junior doctors. Several factors might account for this: busier…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Undergraduate Study, Hospitals, Physician Patient Relationship
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Kitto, Simon C.; Sargeant, Joan; Reeves, Scott; Silver, Ivan – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2012
Over the last 15 years there has been an increasingly energetic search for theories and definitions in the burgeoning area of knowledge translation (KT) in the health care context. The focus has been on the design and evaluation of KT activities with little attention to developing a considered KT theoretical/methodological approach that takes a…
Descriptors: Health Occupations, Evaluation Research, Translation, Sociology
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Cilliers, Francois J.; Schuwirth, Lambert W. T.; Herman, Nicoline; Adendorff, Hanelie J.; van der Vleuten, Cees P. M. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2012
It has become axiomatic that assessment impacts powerfully on student learning. However, surprisingly little research has been published emanating from authentic higher education settings about the nature and mechanism of the pre-assessment learning effects of summative assessment. Less still emanates from health sciences education settings. This…
Descriptors: Grounded Theory, Medical Education, Medical Students, Summative Evaluation
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Zaidi, Zareen; Jaffery, Tara; Shahid, Afshan; Moin, Shaheen; Gilani, Ahsen; Burdick, William – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2012
At our medical college many students have lower ratings in their clinical performance once they start their clinical years (third year). This is contrary to their results in other written exams. Some students demonstrate better clinical performance. We used the six-step Positive Deviance (PD) Conceptual Framework to identify and disseminate the…
Descriptors: Generalizability Theory, Medical Students, Medical Evaluation, Learning Strategies
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Bekkink, Marleen Olde; Donders, Rogier; van Muijen, Goos N. P.; Ruiter, Dirk J. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2012
Until now, positive effects of assessment at a medical curriculum level have not been demonstrated. This study was performed to determine whether an interim assessment, taken during a small group work session of an ongoing biomedical course, results in students' increased performance at the formal course examination. A randomized controlled trial…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Control Groups, Medical Students, Intervention
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Ajjawi, Rola; Higgs, Joy – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2012
Communication is an important area in health professional education curricula, however it has been dealt with as discrete skills that can be learned and taught separate to the underlying thinking. Communication of clinical reasoning is a phenomenon that has largely been ignored in the literature. This research sought to examine how experienced…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Listening, Hermeneutics, Interviews
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Teteris, Elise; Fraser, Kristin; Wright, Bruce; McLaughlin, Kevin – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2012
Despite limited data on patient outcomes, simulation training has already been adopted and embraced by a large number of medical schools. Yet widespread acceptance of simulation should not relieve us of the duty to demonstrate if, and under which circumstances, training learners on simulation benefits real patients. Here we review the data on…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Medical Schools, Transfer of Training, Patients
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Ahern, Stephane P.; Doyle, Tina K.; Marquis, Francois; Lesk, Corey; Skrobik, Yoanna – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2012
In order to improve the understanding of educational needs among residents caring for the critically ill, narrative accounts of 19 senior physician trainees participating in level of care decision-making were analyzed. In this multicentre qualitative study involving 9 university centers in Canada, in-depth interviews were conducted in either…
Descriptors: Caring, Educational Needs, Student Attitudes, Physicians
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Eva, Kevin W.; Armson, Heather; Holmboe, Eric; Lockyer, Jocelyn; Loney, Elaine; Mann, Karen; Sargeant, Joan – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2012
Self-appraisal has repeatedly been shown to be inadequate as a mechanism for performance improvement. This has placed greater emphasis on understanding the processes through which self-perception and external feedback interact to influence professional development. As feedback is inevitably interpreted through the lens of one's self-perceptions it…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Physicians, Focus Groups, Cognitive Processes
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Benbassat, Jochanan; Baumal, Reuben – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2012
Undergraduate medical education is too long; it does not meet the needs for physicians' workforce; and its content is inconsistent with the job characteristics of some of its graduates. In this paper we attempt to respond to these problems by streamlining medical education along the following three reforms. First, high school graduates would be…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Medical Schools, Physicians, Public Health
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Durning, Steven J.; Artino, Anthony R.; Boulet, John R.; Dorrance, Kevin; van der Vleuten, Cees; Schuwirth, Lambert – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2012
Context specificity, or the variation in a participant's performance from one case, or situation, to the next, is a recognized problem in medical education. However, studies have not explored the potential reasons for context specificity in experts using the lens of situated cognition and cognitive load theories (CLT). Using these theories, we…
Descriptors: Expertise, Video Technology, Learning Theories, Medical Education
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