All Insights
Exploring the science, practice, and business of medicine.
Exploring the science, practice, and business of medicine.
Showing 10 out of 474 Insights
Whether it be reading text, listening to lectures or attending conferences, creating sketch-notes has become my go-to method of recording and summarizing content.
As medical educators, it is our responsibility to nurture and develop the altruistic values that bring students into the calling of medicine. We must provide trainees with the knowledge, skills, role models and mentorship needed to develop a career founded upon their personal and professional values.
Faculty who have a passion for building IPE are aware of these challenges but will also quickly tell you how rewarding addressing these challenges can be! Simply put, designing IPE will be one of the most exhausting, rewarding, and all-consuming innovations you can do as an educator.
The single most life changing event in this fellowship for me was becoming aware of Harvard Macy’s courses. One of my predecessor medical education fellows has just come back from one of the courses. Her eyes were glowing.
One does not have to go far at AAMC to see the reach of Liz and HMI within the medical education community – and by that I mean I literally cannot walk from one session to the next without running into a Macy colleague eager to share their latest project or innovation.
In this Harvard Macy Institute blog post, reaching cultural competency while teaching abroad is discussed.
Three-year medical education is neither a new nor a radical idea. Many medical schools in the 1970’s offered accelerated pathways. Studies from the 1970’s have shown that graduates of 3-year programs are equally competent compared to residents trained in traditional 4-year schools.
As standardized tools are implemented more broadly in efforts to ensure best practice and improve patient outcomes, we are calling for a renewed focus on the user of these tools—the physician who cares for patients in complex systems where uncertainty is inherent.
The course connected me with experts in the field of assessment and allowed me the opportunity to have one-on-one encounters with the experts. The peer consultations and large group case discussions helped me consider the important steps I would need to be successful in developing this measure
Professional schools have long been leaders in developing teaching cases covering a vast array of topics, from business to policy to medicine to law.