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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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Mentoring programs for medical students - a review of the PubMed literature 2000 - 2008

TL;DR: In Europe, more mentoring programs should be developed, but would need to be rigorously assessed based on evidence of their value in terms of both their impact on the career paths of juniors and their benefit for the mentors.
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Humanities in undergraduate medical education: a literature review.

TL;DR: Evidence on the positive long-term impacts of integrating humanities into undergraduatemedical education is sparse and may pose a threat to the continued development of humanities-related activities in undergraduate medical education in the context of current demands for evidence to demonstrate educational effectiveness.
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Back to the basic sciences: an innovative approach to teaching senior medical students how best to integrate basic science and clinical medicine.

TL;DR: The authors hope to advance the national discussion about the need to more fully integrate basic science teaching throughout all four years of the medical student curriculum by placing a curricular innovation in the context of similar efforts by other U.S. and Canadian medical schools.
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Encouraging scholarship: medical school programs to promote student inquiry beyond the traditional medical curriculum

TL;DR: The authors believe that this type of program has the potential to significantly impact the education of medical students through scholarly, in-depth inquiry and longitudinal faculty mentorship.
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How to measure success: the impact of scholarly concentrations on students--a literature review.

TL;DR: Scholarly concentrations (SCs) are elective or required curricular experiences that give students opportunities to study subjects in-depth beyond the conventional medical curriculum and require them to complete an independent scholarly project.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Emerging ethical issues in neuroscience

TL;DR: This commentary reviews the ethical issues raised by progress in many areas of neuroscience in terms of their novelty and their imminence, with an exploration of the relevant ethical principles in each case.
Journal ArticleDOI

Review of ethics curricula in undergraduate medical education.

TL;DR: The background to its inclusion in undergraduate curriculum and the consensus that has arisen on the design of ethics curricula are examined, using Harden’s curriculum and S.I.C.E.S models as templates.
Journal ArticleDOI

Approaches to learning, need for cognition, and strategic flexibility among university students.

TL;DR: Relationships among approaches to learning (deep, surface), need for cognition, and three types of control of learning (adaptive, inflexible, irresolute) are explored.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Scholarly Project Initiative: introducing scholarship in medicine through a longitudinal, mentored curricular program.

TL;DR: The Scholarly Project Initiative of the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine aims to provide all students with structured preparatory coursework, foster critical analytical and communication skills, and introduce the breadth and depth of the research and scholarly enterprise engendered by modern academic medicine in the contexts of both the classroom and an individual, mentored experience.
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