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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 61 to 75 of 536 results
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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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Veale, Pamela; Carson, Julie; Coderre, Sylvain; Woloschuk, Wayne; Wright, Bruce; McLaughlin, Kevin – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2014
Although the clinical clerkship model is based upon sound pedagogy, including theories of social learning and situated learning, studies evaluating clinical performance of residents suggests that this model may not fully meet the learning needs of students. Here our objective was to design a curriculum to bridge the learning gaps of the existing…
Descriptors: Clinical Experience, Graduate Students, Medical Students, College Curriculum
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Maloney, Stephen; Moss, Alan; Ilic, Dragan – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2014
Social Networking Sites (SNS) have seen exponential growth in recent years. The high utilisation of SNS by tertiary students makes them an attractive tool for educational institutions. This study aims to identify health professional students' use and behaviours with SNS, including students' perspectives on potential applications within…
Descriptors: Social Networks, Electronic Learning, Technology Uses in Education, Health Education
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Lefroy, Janet; Thomas, Adam; Harrison, Chris; Williams, Stephen; O'Mahony, Fidelma; Gay, Simon; Kinston, Ruth; McKinley, R. K. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2014
While formative workplace based assessment can improve learners' skills, it often does not because the procedures used do not facilitate feedback which is sufficiently specific to scaffold improvement. Provision of pre-formulated strategies to address predicted learning needs has potential to improve the quality and automate the provision of…
Descriptors: Skill Development, Program Validation, Improvement Programs, Program Development
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Loftus, Jay; Stavraky, Tom; Urquhart, Bradley L. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2014
Demand for e-learning courses has risen dramatically placing pressure on institutions to offer more online courses. Third party vendors now offer courses that can be embedded directly into learning management systems. When transitioning from in-class to e-learning formats, instructors must decide whether to use commercially available courses or…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Instructional Design, Online Courses, Electronic Learning
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Barman, Linda; Silén, Charlotte; Bolander Laksov, Klara – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2014
This paper reports on how teachers within health sciences education translate outcome-based education (OBE) into practice when they design courses. The study is an empirical contribution to the debate about outcome- and competency-based approaches in health sciences education. A qualitative method was used to study how teachers from 14 different…
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Outcome Based Education, Health Sciences, Competency Based Teacher Education
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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)
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Sibbald, Matt; McKinney, James; Cavalcanti, Rodrigo B.; Yu, Eric; Wood, David A.; Nair, Parvathy; Eva, Kevin W.; Hatala, Rose – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2013
Use of dual-processing has been widely touted as a strategy to reduce diagnostic error in clinical medicine. However, this strategy has not been tested among medical trainees with complex diagnostic problems. We sought to determine whether dual-processing instruction could reduce diagnostic error across a spectrum of experience with trainees…
Descriptors: Medical Students, Medical Education, Medicine, Human Body
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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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Costa, Patrício; Magalhães, Eunice; Costa, Manuel João – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2013
Empathy is a relevant attribute in the context of patient care. However, a decline in empathy throughout medical education has been reported in North-American medical schools, particularly, in the transition to clinical training. The present study aims to longitudinally model empathy during medical school at three time points: at the entrance,…
Descriptors: Medical Students, Medical Education, Empathy, Models
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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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Young, Louise; Papinczak, Tracey – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2013
Problem-based learning (PBL) has been used to scaffold and support student learning in many Australian medical programs, with the role of the facilitator in the process considered crucial to the overall educational experience of students. With the increasing size of student cohorts and in an environment of financial constraint, it is important to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Problem Based Learning, Teaching Methods, Medical Education
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Walsh, Kieran – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2013
Medical education has had a long history. Much of that history can be captured in quotations from the many people who have made medical education what it is today. Even though newcomers to the field often see and approach problems as if they were the first to discover them, examining quotations makes us realise that ideas of reform in medical…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Educational Change, Fear, Educational Innovation
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McKenzie, Karen – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2013
The present study compared the impact of face to face teaching with a short online game informed learning activity on health participants' knowledge about, and confidence in, managing aggressive situations. Both forms of teaching resulted in a significant increase in participants' knowledge and confidence. Face to face training led to…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Conventional Instruction, Computer Games, Learning Activities
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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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