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Showing 16 to 30 of 536 results
Harrison, Christopher J.; Könings, Karen D.; Schuwirth, Lambert; Wass, Valerie; van der Vleuten, Cees – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2015
Despite calls for feedback to be incorporated in all assessments, a dichotomy exists between formative and summative assessments. When feedback is provided in a summative context, it is not always used effectively by learners. In this study we explored the reasons for this. We conducted individual interviews with 17 students who had recently…
Descriptors: Summative Evaluation, Feedback (Response), Barriers, Students
The Impact of 2011 ACGME Duty Hour Restrictions on Internal Medicine Resident Workload and Education
Vucicevic, Darko; Mookadam, Farouk; Webb, Brandon J.; Labonte, Helene R.; Cha, Stephen S.; Blair, Janis E. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2015
The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) implemented work hour restrictions for physicians in training in 2003 that were revised July 1, 2011. Current published data are insufficient to assess whether such work hour restrictions will have long-term impact on residents' education. We searched computer-generated reports…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Medical Students, Faculty Workload, Student Responsibility
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
Curran, Vernon; Fleet, Lisa; White, Susan; Bessell, Clare; Deshpandey, Akhil; Drover, Anne; Hayward, Mark; Valcour, James – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2015
The neonatal resuscitation program (NRP) has been developed to educate physicians and other health care providers about newborn resuscitation and has been shown to improve neonatal resuscitation skills. Simulation-based training is recommended as an effective modality for instructing neonatal resuscitation and both low and high-fidelity manikin…
Descriptors: Simulation, Fidelity, Neonates, First Aid
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
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
Cook, David A.; Zendejas, Benjamin; Hamstra, Stanley J.; Hatala, Rose; Brydges, Ryan – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2014
Ongoing transformations in health professions education underscore the need for valid and reliable assessment. The current standard for assessment validation requires evidence from five sources: content, response process, internal structure, relations with other variables, and consequences. However, researchers remain uncertain regarding the types…
Descriptors: Health Personnel, Professional Education, Validity, Evidence
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
Henriksen, Ann-Helen; Ringsted, Charlotte – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2014
The aim of this study was to explore how medical students perceive the experience of learning from patient instructors (patients with rheumatism who teach health professionals and students) in the context of coupled faculty-led and patient-led teaching session. This was an explorative study with a qualitative approach based on focus group…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Medical Students, Patients, Experiential Learning
Sibbald, Matthew; De Bruin, Anique B. H.; van Merrienboer, Jeroen J. G. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2014
Checklists that focus attention on key variables might allow clinicians to find and fix their mistakes. However, whether this approach can be applied to clinicians of varying degrees of expertise is unclear. Novice and expert clinicians vary in their predominant reasoning processes and in the types of errors they commit. We studied 44 clinicians…
Descriptors: Health Personnel, Check Lists, Error Correction, Expertise
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
Varpio, Lara; Bidlake, Erin; Humphrey-Murto, Sue; Sutherland, Stephanie; Hamstra, Stanley J. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2014
Growth in the field of medical education is evidenced by the proliferation of units dedicated to advancing Medical Education Research and Innovation (MERI). While a review of the literature discovered narrative accounts of MERI unit development, we found no systematic examinations of the dimensions of and structures that facilitate the success of…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Performance Factors, Success, Medical Research
McLaughlin, Kevin; Eva, Kevin W.; Norman, Geoff R. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2014
Using heuristics offers several cognitive advantages, such as increased speed and reduced effort when making decisions, in addition to allowing us to make decision in situations where missing data do not allow for formal reasoning. But the traditional view of heuristics is that they trade accuracy for efficiency. Here the authors discuss sources…
Descriptors: Heuristics, Error of Measurement, Bias, Accuracy
Oliver, Tom; Hecker, Kent; Hausdorf, Peter A.; Conlon, Peter – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2014
The multiple mini-interview (MMI) used in health professional schools' admission processes is reported to assess multiple non-cognitive constructs such as ethical reasoning, oral communication, or problem evaluation. Though validation studies have been performed with total MMI scores, there is a paucity of information regarding how well MMI…
Descriptors: Health Personnel, Health Education, Interviews, Ethics
Grierson, Lawrence E. M. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2014
Much has been made in the recent medical education literature of the incorrect characterization of simulation along a continuum of low to high fidelity (Cook et al. "JAMA" 306(9): 978-988, 2011; Norman et al. "Med Educ" 46(7): 636-647, 2012; Teteris et al. "Adv Health Sci Educ" 17(1): 137-144, 2012). For the most…
Descriptors: Fidelity, Simulation, Medical Education, Transfer of Training

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