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1.
Ger Med Sci ; 12: Doc05, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24574941

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Germany, like many other countries, will soon have a shortage of qualified doctors. One reason for the dissatisfaction amongst medical residents are the relatively unstructured residency training programs despite increasing importance of outcome-based education. The aim of our study was to identify characteristics and requirements for good teaching during anesthesiology residency training from the resident's point of view. METHODS: A consensus workshop with residents from all medical universities in Germany was held. Participants were allocated to one of the three topics, chosen based on a 2009 nationwide evaluation of residency. The three topics were (A) characteristics of helpful/good teachers, (B) characteristics of helpful/good conditions and (C) characteristics of helpful/good curricular structure. Each group followed a nominal group technique consensus process to define and rank characteristics for a good residency. RESULTS: 31 (79.5%) resident representatives were present. The consented results put emphasis on the importance of structured curricula including transparent goals and objectives, in training formative assessments and quality assurance measures for the program. Residents further long for trained trainers with formal teaching qualifications and protected teaching time. CONCLUSIONS: Good residency training requires careful consideration of all stakeholders' needs. Results reflect and extend previous findings and are at least to some degree easily implemented. These findings are an important step to establish a broader consensus within the discipline.


Subject(s)
Anesthesiology/education , Attitude of Health Personnel , Educational Measurement/statistics & numerical data , Faculty , Internship and Residency/statistics & numerical data , Teaching/classification , Teaching/statistics & numerical data , Adult , Curriculum , Educational Measurement/methods , Female , Germany , Humans , Male , Professional Competence/statistics & numerical data , Quality Assurance, Health Care/methods , Young Adult
2.
GMS Z Med Ausbild ; 30(1): Doc13, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23467484

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Both for curricular development and mapping, as well as for orientation within the mounting supply of learning resources in medical education, the Semantic Web ("Web 3.0") poses a low-threshold, effective tool that enables identification of content related items across system boundaries. Replacement of the currently required manual with an automatically generated link, which is based on content and semantics, requires the use of a suitably structured vocabulary for a machine-readable description of object content. Aim of this study is to compile the existing taxonomies and ontologies used for the annotation of medical content and learning resources, to compare those using selected criteria, and to verify their suitability in the context described above. METHODS: Based on a systematic literature search, existing taxonomies and ontologies for the description of medical learning resources were identified. Through web searches and/or direct contact with the respective editors, each of the structured vocabularies thus identified were examined in regards to topic, structure, language, scope, maintenance, and technology of the taxonomy/ontology. In addition, suitability for use in the Semantic Web was verified. RESULTS: Among 20 identified publications, 14 structured vocabularies were identified, which differed rather strongly in regards to language, scope, currency, and maintenance. None of the identified vocabularies fulfilled the necessary criteria for content description of medical curricula and learning resources in the German-speaking world. DISCUSSION: While moving towards Web 3.0, a significant problem lies in the selection and use of an appropriate German vocabulary for the machine-readable description of object content. Possible solutions include development, translation and/or combination of existing vocabularies, possibly including partial translations of English vocabularies.


Subject(s)
Biological Ontologies/trends , Classification/methods , Education, Medical/trends , Social Media/trends , Curriculum/trends , Germany , Humans , Vocabulary, Controlled , Web Browser
3.
GMS Z Med Ausbild ; 30(1): Doc4, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23467581

ABSTRACT

During the last decade, medical education in the German-speaking world has been striving to become more practice-oriented. This is currently being achieved in many schools through the implementation of simulation-based instruction in Skills Labs. Simulators are thus an essential part of this type of medical training, and their acquisition and operation by a Skills Lab require a large outlay of resources. Therefore, the Practical Skills Committee of the Medical Education Society (GMA) introduced a new project, which aims to improve the flow of information between the Skills Labs and enable a transparent assessment of the simulators via an online database (the Simulator Network).


Subject(s)
Clinical Competence , Computer Simulation , Computer-Assisted Instruction , Education, Medical , Teaching Materials , Curriculum , Germany , Humans , Practice, Psychological , Software
4.
GMS Z Med Ausbild ; 29(4): Doc58, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22916084

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: The importance of the acquisition of practical medical skills during medical school is increasing. With the consensus statement "Practical Skills," developed by the GMA as part of the National Competency-Based Learning Objective Catalogue for Medicine (NKLM), a reference frame was created for the procurement of such skills. This frame consists of 290 learning objectives divided by "organ system," type (core or elective learning objective), current stage of medical education and level of instruction. By comparing a large and well evaluated range of student tutorials with the consensus statement, one can analyze the practical benefit of the statement, as well as evaluate the tutorial program for completeness. METHODS: In the first stage, four evaluators in two groups independently classified all consensus statement's learning objectives by each of the 48 tutorials currently offered. The inter-rater reliability among the evaluators of each group was calculated both collectively, and according to each organ system. In the second stage, disagreements in the classification were resolved through discussion and consensus decision-making. The coverage of the learning objectives by the tutorials, in the required level of instruction, was then analyzed separately by learning objective type and organ system. Reasons for any initial dissent were recorded and grouped thematically. RESULTS: The correlation between the classifications of the two evaluators was moderately significant. The strength of this correlation, and thus the precision of individual learning goals wording, varied according to organ system. After a consensus was reached, the results show that the offered tutorials covered 66% of all learning objectives, as well as 74% of the core objectives. The degree of coverage differed according to organ system and stage of medical education. CONCLUSION: The consensus statement is suitable to systematically analyze and develop teaching units. The comparison with established curricula also offers possibilities for further development of the consensus statement, and therefore also of the NKLM.


Subject(s)
Clinical Competence/standards , Consensus , Education, Medical/standards , Clinical Clerkship , Competency-Based Education , Curriculum , Germany , Goals , Humans , Internship and Residency , Statistics as Topic
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