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Showing 1,726 to 1,740 of 12,293 results
Hicks, Doris T.; Pivarnik, Lori F.; Richard, Nicole Leydon; Gable, Robert K.; Morrissey, Michael T. – Journal of Food Science Education, 2013
An online needs assessment survey of healthcare providers was developed and implemented to determine knowledge and attitudes about the benefits and risks of consuming seafood along with how this might impact patient/clientele counseling. Only 6 of the 45 knowledge items queried (13%) met the 80% subject mastery or proficiency with a total…
Descriptors: Health Personnel, Online Surveys, Needs Assessment, Attitudes
Hovland, Jana A.; Carraway-Stage, Virginia G.; Cela, Artenida; Collins, Caitlin; Díaz, Sebastián R.; Collins, Angelo; Duffrin, Melani W. – Journal of Food Science Education, 2013
Health professionals and policymakers are asking educators to place more emphasis on food and nutrition education. Integrating these topics into science curricula using hand-on, food-based activities may strengthen students' understanding of science concepts. The Food, Math, and Science Teaching Enhancement Resource (FoodMASTER) Initiative is…
Descriptors: Foods Instruction, Elementary School Science, Interdisciplinary Approach, Knowledge Level
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)
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
Lu, Fletcher; Lemonde, Manon – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2013
The objective of this study was to assess if online teaching delivery produces comparable student test performance as the traditional face-to-face approach irrespective of academic aptitude. This study involves a quasi-experimental comparison of student performance in an undergraduate health science statistics course partitioned in two ways. The…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Online Courses, Conventional Instruction, Quasiexperimental Design
Heijne-Penninga, M.; Kuks, J. B. M.; Hofman, W. H. A.; Muijtjens, A. M. M.; Cohen-Schotanus, J. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2013
The influence of problem-based learning (PBL) and open-book tests on long-term knowledge retention is unclear and subject of discussion. Hypotheses were that PBL as well as open-book tests positively affect long-term knowledge retention. Four progress test results of fifth and sixth-year medical students (n = 1,648) of three medical schools were…
Descriptors: Medical Students, Medical Education, Problem Based Learning, Measures (Individuals)
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
Shin, In-Soo; Kim, Jung-Hee – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2013
Problem-based learning (PBL) has been identified as an approach that improves the training of nurses by teaching them how to apply theory to clinical practice and by developing their problem-solving skills, which could be used to overcome environmental constraints within clinical practice. A consensus is emerging that there is a need for…
Descriptors: Problem Based Learning, Nursing Education, Problem Solving, Meta Analysis

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