6 results on '"Anderson, Katrina"'
Search Results
2. Between SET and ASP: balancing the scales of student evaluation of teaching (SET) and teachers' assessments of student performance (ASP) for medical school education in psychiatry.
- Author
-
Looi, Jeffrey C. L., Anderson, Katrina J., and Looi, Jeffrey Cl
- Subjects
- *
PSYCHIATRY education , *STUDENT evaluation of teachers , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *EDUCATIONAL tests & measurements , *NEUROPSYCHIATRY , *MEDICAL education standards , *MEDICAL school faculty , *MEDICAL students , *PSYCHIATRY - Abstract
Objectives:: We explore the relative roles of student evaluation of teaching (SET) and teachers' assessment of student performance (ASP) in medical school education in psychiatry.Conclusions:: We conclude that SET and ASP need to be better researched as outcome measures, and input from both processes needs to be balanced in evaluating psychiatric medical education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Comparing general practice and hospital rotations.
- Author
-
Anderson, Katrina, Haesler, Emily, Stubbs, Alison, and Molinari, Kate
- Subjects
- *
GENERAL practitioners , *SOCIAL support , *VOCATIONAL guidance , *PHYSICIANS , *UNDERGRADUATES , *MEDICAL students - Abstract
Background The Prevocational General Practice Placement programme ( PGPPP) aims to provide junior doctors with professional, well-supervised, educational rotations in general practice. There is a paucity of literature evaluating the educational effectiveness of the PGPPP. This study aims to compare general practice rotations with hospital rotations, with respect to teaching and support, acquisition of skills and knowledge, and role autonomy. Methods All junior doctors who participated in a PGPPP rotation were invited to complete a voluntary anonymous online survey using the Postgraduate Hospital Educational Environment Measure ( PHEEM) inventory. The PHEEM presents Likert scales grouped into four subscales for participants to rate statements about their rotations. Surveys were completed at the end of the year in which doctors undertook a PGPPP rotation, and covered all rotations. These survey findings were used to compare general practice and hospital rotations. Results In all four subscales of teaching, clinical skills, social support and role autonomy, the general practice rotation performed as well as, or better than, hospital rotations in the areas of emergency, medicine, and surgery. General practice outperformed all other rotations in 15 out of 20 statements across all subscales. Discussion This study demonstrates the educational value of a general practice placement in comparison with hospital placements. Expansion of the PGPPP should be considered to provide all junior doctors with the benefits of exposure to generalist skills in the community. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Chronic Zoom Syndrome: emergence of an insidious and debilitating mental health disorder during COVID-19.
- Author
-
Anderson, Katrina and Looi, Jeffrey CL
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL illness , *COVID-19 , *MENTAL health , *MEDICAL students , *SYNDROMES - Abstract
Keywords: video-meeting; overuse; Zoom; mental disorder; medical education EN video-meeting overuse Zoom mental disorder medical education 669 669 1 11/23/20 20201201 NES 201201 Dear Sir, We highlight a new diagnosis of paramount significance during the COVID-19 pandemic public health measures, and which may be included in international diagnostic classifications (e.g. the I Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders i or I International Classification of Diseases i ) in the future. Our proposed diagnosis is based on clinical observations of an insidious and debilitating video-meeting-mediated disorder afflicting medical students and their clinical academic teachers over the last 6 months, during social distancing for the COVID-19 pandemic in Australia. We consider that this disorder may be usefully classified under the rubric of a trauma or stressor-related disorder; analogous to similar COVID-19 emergent mental disorders (to be discussed in forthcoming papers) such as COVID-19-related Isolated-Academic Logorrhoea (an obsessive-compulsive and related disorder) - the product of which may be exemplified by this letter - or, COVID-19-related Specific Communication Disorder (a bullshit or related disorder). [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. What motivates general practitioners to teach.
- Author
-
Thomson, Jennifer, Haesler, Emily, Anderson, Katrina, and Barnard, Amanda
- Subjects
- *
GENERAL practitioners , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *LABOR supply , *MEDICAL students , *PHYSICIAN training , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *PHYSICIANS' attitudes - Abstract
Introduction and aim The Australian general practitioner ( GP) teaching workforce will need to expand in order to provide for the increasing number of medical students and doctors-in-training. Understanding factors that motivate GPs to become involved in teaching in their clinical practice environments is important for developing recruitment and retention strategies. Method Thirty-one semi-structured interviews were conducted with a cross section of GP teachers and were subjected to thematic analysis. Themes were identified and further classified as motivations and prerequisites for teaching. Results The desire to update clinical knowledge was the most frequently mentioned motivation for teaching, and was described as a strategy for GP teachers to preserve clinical competence through the opportunity to learn new aspects of medicine from junior colleagues. Other motivations included personal fulfillment and enjoyment of teaching, the opportunity to pass on general practice skills and knowledge, promoting general practice as a career, and fulfilling a sense of responsibility to the profession and community. Peers, students and patients also influenced the decision to teach. Most GPs identified that time, workload, availability of space and adequate financial remuneration were prerequisites for teaching. Practice owners also often determined the GP teachers' capacity to teach. Discussion To increase the recruitment and retention of GP teachers, it is recommended that teaching organisations give more recognition to teaching as a clinical professional development activity, place more emphasis on GPs' personal enjoyment, professional responsibility and pride in teaching, and increase engagement with practice owners. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Looking Beyond Personal Stressors: An Examination of How Academic Stressors Contribute to Depression in Australian Graduate Medical Students.
- Author
-
O’Reilly, Erin, McNeill, Kathleen G., Mavor, Kenneth I., and Anderson, Katrina
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL depression , *LIFE change events , *PSYCHOLOGY of medical students , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *REGRESSION analysis , *SELF-evaluation , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *SAMPLE size (Statistics) , *WELL-being , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,STUDY & teaching of medicine - Abstract
Background: Medical school is a challenging environment that requires students to deal effectively with stress borne out of the medical education environment, as well as their personal lives. Previous research has not systemically distinguished between academic and personal sources of stress, and in particular has not explored the independent contribution that academic stressors make to medical student depression.Purposes: This study aimed to investigate whether academic stressors make a unique contribution to the level of depressive symptoms in medical students, over and above the contribution made by personal stressors alone.Methods: Sixty-seven medical students completed an online questionnaire designed to measure the total number of recent life events (personal and academic), and their perceived impact, using a modified version of the Psychiatric Epidemiology Research Interview Life Events Scale. Depressive symptoms were measured using the Centre for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale.Results: Both the total number of personal stressors,r(67) = .363,p= .003, and their perceived impact,r(67) = .412,p= .001, were found to be positively related to depressive symptoms. A positive relationship was also observed between depressive symptoms and the total number of academic stressors,r(67) = .321,p= .008, and their perceived impact,r(67) = .489,p< .001. In addition, it was found that the perceived impact of academic stressors was able to explain higher levels of depressive symptoms in medical students over and above the effect afforded by personal stressors alone.Conclusion: The findings of this study suggest that stress borne out of the medical school environment contributes to depressive symptoms in medical students over and above the contribution made by personal stressors alone. This indicates that although it is important to help students cope with stress borne out of their personal lives, interventions by medical schools aimed at reducing the impact of academic stressors on medical student depression may also be of great importance. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.