Search

Showing total 528 results

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Topic curriculum Remove constraint Topic: curriculum Language english Remove constraint Language: english Journal medical education Remove constraint Journal: medical education
528 results

Search Results

2. Writing a scientific paper as part of the medical curriculum.

3. original paper Teaching and learning pathology: a critical review of the English literature.

4. Predicting communication skills with a paper-and-pencil test.

5. Using real patients in problem-based learning: students’ comments on the value of using real, as opposed to paper cases, in a problem-based learning module in general practice.

6. Effectiveness of problem-based learning curricula: theory, practice and paper darts.

8. Aha! Taking on the myth that simulation-derived surprise enhances learning.

9. The state of health advocacy training in postgraduate medical education: a scoping review.

10. Original paper Teaching research methodology in medical schools: students' attitudes towards and knowledge about science.

11. Original paper Exit learning outcomes for the PRHO year: an evidence base for informed decisions.

12. The hidden curriculum in nursing education: a scoping study.

13. A roadmap to realist interviews in health professions education research: Recommendations based on a critical analysis.

14. CARDA: Guiding document analyses in health professions education research.

15. A systematic review of 7 years of research on entrustable professional activities in graduate medical education, 2011–2018.

16. Pathways, journeys and experiences: Integrating curricular activities related to social accountability within an undergraduate medical curriculum.

17. 'Noticing' in health professions education: Time to pay attention?

18. The global–local tension in medical education: turning 'think global, act local' on its head?

19. Two‐eyed seeing: A useful gaze in Indigenous medical education research.

20. A research approach for co-designing education with healthcare consumers.

21. Quality improvement: An argument for difference.

22. Exploring patterns and pattern languages of medical education.

23. Possibility and agency in Figured Worlds: becoming a 'good doctor'.

24. Stethoscope of the 21st century: dominant discourses of ultrasound in medical education.

25. Host perspective on academic supervision, health care provision and institutional partnership during short‐term electives in global health.

26. Beyond 'driving': The relationship between assessment, performance and learning.

27. How clinical communication has become a core part of medical education in the UK.

28. Medical students' experiences with goals of care discussions and their impact on professional identity formation.

29. Caring for a common future: medical schools' social accountability.

30. Towards evidence-based practice in medical training: making evaluations more meaningful.

31. Development of foetal and neonatal simulators at the University of Porto.

32. Basic Science The impact of curricular change on medical students' knowledge of anatomy.

33. Total internal reflection: an essay on paradigms.

34. Reflections on the humanities in medical education.

35. Use of a journal club and letter-writing exercise to teach critical appraisal to medical undergraduates.

36. Single-handed practices – their contribution to an undergraduate teaching network in the first year of the new curriculum.

37. 'Can the patient speak?': postcolonialism and patient involvement in undergraduate and postgraduate medical education.

38. Current efforts in medical education to incorporate national health priorities.

39. Back from basics: integration of science and practice in medical education.

40. Including health promotion and illness prevention in medical education: a progress report.

41. Recommendations for undergraduate medical electives: a UK consensus statement.

42. Learning about gender on campus: an analysis of the hidden curriculum for medical students.

43. Student leadership in interprofessional education: benefits, challenges and implications for educators, researchers and policymakers.

44. Complexity, risk and simulation in learning procedural skills.

45. The challenge of partnership for global health electives.

46. Innovative training for new surgical roles − the place of evaluation.

47. Perceptions of the learning environment in higher specialist training of doctors: implications for recruitment and retention.

48. Developing an outcome-focused core curriculum.

49. Emotional responses of tutors and students in problem-based learning: lessons for staff development.

50. The effectiveness of problem-based learning compared to traditional teaching in undergraduate psychiatry.