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Some Paradoxes in Competency-Based Dental Education

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TLDR
It is concluded that the openness of the competency concept is one reason for its longevity and usefulness in dental education.
Abstract
Competency-based dental education was introduced in 1993 and has proven to be a robust innovation, guiding curricular design, clinical education and evaluation, and accreditation. At the same time, it has been irregularly implemented and is understood in different ways. These paradoxes were explored in a survey of academic and clinical deans and chairs of departments of endodontics and restorative dentistry at U.S. and Canadian dental schools. It was confirmed that fewer than half of the respondents can identify the ADEA and ADA definition of competency. Significant differences were reported in the perceived understanding and value placed on competencies and their impact on dental education. Differences were also found to exist in evaluation practices and in how evaluation data are used to determine students' readiness for graduation. It is concluded that the openness of the competency concept is one reason for its longevity and usefulness in dental education.

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Citations
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Curriculum change in dental education, 2003-09.

TL;DR: There was an increase in the percentage of schools with interdisciplinary courses, especially in the basic sciences since 2002-03, but no change in the use of problem-based and case-reinforced learning in dental curricula.
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Medical education and the tyranny of competency.

TL;DR: It is argued that the competency model—which tends to be top-down and prescriptive—does not provide the framework for objective educational assessment that it claims to provide and the alternative apprenticeship model is more appropriate for professional education.
Journal ArticleDOI

Competency-Based Education for Professional Psychology: Moving From Concept to Practice

TL;DR: Competency-based education (CBE) is a model that guides the educational process toward acquisition of the knowledge, skills, and attitudes needed for effective professional practice in service of the public as discussed by the authors.
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Learning Curves: What Do Dental Students Learn from Repeated Practice of Clinical Procedures?

TL;DR: The absence of a pattern showing that amount of prior experience improves clinical performance raises questions about the practice of setting "requirements" for graduation and challenges dental educators to better explain the presumed relationship between practice and performance.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Customization or Conformity? An Institutional and Network Perspective on the Content and Consequences of TQM Adoption

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed a theoretical framework that integrates institutional and network perspectives on the form and consequences of administrative innovations and found strong evidence for the importance of institutional factors in determining how innovations are defined and implemented.
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Management Fashion: Lifecycles, Triggers, and Collective Learning Processes:

TL;DR: In this paper, a case study of the quality circle management fashion focuses on three features of management-knowledge entrepreneurs' discourse promoting or discrediting such fashions: its lifecycle, forces triggering stages in its life cycle, and the type of collective learning it fostered.
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Rhetoric and Myth in Management Fashion

TL;DR: In this article, a count of publications over a period of time indicates that management concepts come and go like fashions, after a discussion of theories of fashion in aesthetic and technical objects.
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