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Journal ArticleDOI

In-Depth Learning: One School's Initiatives to Foster Integration of Ethics, Values, and the Human Dimensions of Medicine

Steven L. Kanter, +2 more
- 01 Apr 2007 - 
- Vol. 82, Iss: 4, pp 405-409
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TLDR
It is proposed that a theme-based, individualized, in-depth learning experience (in which students pursue a focused project comprehensively and in detail)--one that is an integral part of the curriculum--helps students learn to blend values and ethics with medicine in a way that cannot occur during rapid-paced topical survey courses.
Abstract
Today's medical student curriculum is a lock-step experience that provides a broad survey of medicine with little opportunity to pursue fully integrated, in-depth learning. To teach students about the human dimensions of health care, many schools simply have added courses that survey general areas such as ethics, values, and patient-doctor relationships. However, a superficial, broad-brush approach does not offer students sufficient opportunity to engage with these topics in substantive and meaningful ways. The authors propose that a theme-based, individualized, in-depth learning experience (in which students pursue a focused project comprehensively and in detail)--one that is an integral part of the curriculum--helps students learn to blend values and ethics with medicine in a way that cannot occur during rapid-paced topical survey courses. Furthermore, it is in the depths of a learning experience that one comes face to face with the realities of uncertainty: the realization that unanswerable questions outnumber answerable ones; the awareness of the difficulty in accumulating sufficient evidence to answer a question that is, in fact, answerable; the recognition that many patients' problems transcend available evidence and must be addressed by the art of medicine; the realization that a patient can have a condition that one cannot diagnose and that may even get better for reasons that one cannot understand. The authors describe three initiatives at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, two of which have been offered for more than 10 years, that illustrate the value of in-depth learning experiences. These in-depth experiences blend situated learning, reflective exercises, faculty mentoring, critical reading of literature, and constructive feedback in a prescribed but individualized curriculum.

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Citations
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Teaching suffering: the testimonial-commentary method.

TL;DR: This communication presents a method for instruction in the values of humanism that may help to overcome the “curricular inertia that plagues medical education.”

Fostering Professional Development in Medical Students: Gender Differences in Medical School Honors Programs

TL;DR: Gender differences exist in undergraduate medical school and specialty choice and the role of gender has not been well studied in honors programs, which may help foster women’s professional development and leadership in medicine.

Facilitating enriched learning experience in instrumental classical music practice in the century of digitalization

M. Trei
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated how digital tools facilitate enriched learning experience in individual practices among the instrumentalists in the classical music department at Codarts, Rotterdam, and found that students who own a smartphone, play a woodwind instrument, involve in online study groups, and are either on their last year of Bachelor's or the first year of Master's studies experience most likely the enriched learning experiences.
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The undergraduate medical student's perception of professional mentorship: Results from a developing nation's medical school.

TL;DR: Sixth-year medical students of the University of Jos have a moderate knowledge of and a good attitude toward mentoring, and the implementation of a formal mentoring program for medical students at theUniversity of Jos is strongly recommended.
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Learning and Study Strategies of Students in the First Year of an Entry-Level Physical Therapist Program

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References
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TL;DR: Self-regulated learning can be domain-specific or domain-transcending, and competent performers in a specific domain rely on different types of prior knowledge related to that domain this paper.
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Contrasting forms of understanding for degree examinations: the student experience and its implications

TL;DR: In this article, a detailed examination of the interview transcripts of 13 students, who had just completed their final degree, was supplemented by analyses of written responses from an additional 11 students in their final undergraduate year.
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