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1.
Journal of Health Specialties [JHS]. 2015; 3 (3): 139-143
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-181447

ABSTRACT

Medical leadership and management are increasingly receiving widespread attention internationally. Significant focus has been paid as to the style of leadership within healthcare and how to develop both leadership and management skills and competencies [the two are inseparable yet distinct] throughout the careers of all healthcare professionals. This article discusses how leadership and management development is being considered internationally, both at an organisational and personal level, helpful models and frameworks and challenges and opportunities

2.
Journal of Educational Evaluation for Health Professions ; : 7-2012.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-202633

ABSTRACT

This study aimed to identify those features within secondary school curricula and assessment, particularly science subjects that best predict academic achievement in the first year of three different three-year undergraduate health professional programmes (nursing, pharmacy, and health sciences) at a large New Zealand university. In particular, this study compared the contribution of breadth of knowledge (number of credits acquired) versus grade level (grade point average) and explored the impact of demographic variables on achievement. The findings indicated that grades are the most important factor predicting student success in the first year of university. Although taking biology and physics at secondary school has some impact on university first year achievement, the effect is relatively minor.


Subject(s)
Humans , Achievement , Biology , College Admission Test , Curriculum , Educational Measurement , Health Occupations , New Zealand , Pharmacy , Students, Nursing , Students, Pharmacy , Students, Premedical
3.
Journal of Educational Evaluation for Health Professions ; : 10-2012.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-202630

ABSTRACT

Facilitating the provision of detailed, deep and useful feedback is an important design feature of any educational programme. Here we evaluate feedback provided to medical students completing short transferable skills projects. Feedback quantity and depth were evaluated before and after a simple intervention to change the structure of the feedback-provision form from a blank free-text feedback form to a structured proforma that asked a pair of short questions for each of the six domains being assessed. Each pair of questions consisted of asking the marker 'what was done well?' and 'what changes would improve the assignment?' Changing the form was associated with a significant increase in the quantity of the feedback and in the amount and quality of feedback provided to students. We also observed that, for these double-marked projects, the marker designated as 'marker 1' consistently wrote more feedback than the marker designated 'marker 2'.


Subject(s)
Humans , Students, Medical
4.
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-132185

ABSTRACT

Student learning is an active and constructive process. The role of a teacher is to provide an environment in which students are able to actively engage with subject matter in order to learn it. This article examines the principal features of good curriculum, course and lesson design and discusses ways in which doctors, in their roles as teachers of medical students and medical trainees can ensure that their teaching prompts learners’ engagement in the learning process.

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