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1.
Philippine Journal of Health Research and Development ; (4): 28-36, 2018.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-960049

ABSTRACT

@#<p style="text-align: justify;"><strong>BACKGROUND</strong>: Since 1976, the School of Health Sciences (SHS) in the Philippines has produced a broad range of health professionals serving depressed and underserved communities. Most researches about the SHS present the impact of its unique community-based ladder-type curriculum and only a few focus on the lived experiences of its students.<br /><br /><strong>OBJECTIVES</strong>: This study described how the lived experiences of SHS students with their community-based curriculum manifested as academic resilience.<br /><br /><strong>METHODOLOGY</strong>: This is an exploratory social research. Data were obtained from key informant and focus group interviews, observations of purposively chosen students, teachers, and alumni in Baler Campus, and document review. Data were analyzed using iterative terms and concepts describing respondents' patterns of activities that establish norms in SHS. Joint displays of these norms were constructed to describe the students' academic resilience.<br /><br /><strong>RESULTS</strong>: Admission in SHS requires students to undergo a stringent, often political recruitment process. While in the degree program, students go through constant financial constraints, demanding academic requirements, and challenging balance of hospital and community work with their personal and academic lives. The interplay between inner strength and external support promoted academic resilience. Studying in the SHS is a transformative learning experience. Students experienced multi-faceted problems requiring them to resiliently meet academic standards and maintain their own well-being. The culture of 'damayan' was an important source of psychosocial support.<br /><br /><strong>CONCLUSION</strong>: The SHS curriculum and culture are most instrumental in promoting academic resilience among its students.</p>


Subject(s)
Schools , Curriculum
2.
Medical Education ; : 371-374, 2011.
Article in Japanese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-374461

ABSTRACT

1)In medical education in the United Kingdom, departments of general practice organize the basic training in clinical skills and specialty training in primary care.<br>2)A clinical clerkship in primary care is a compulsory 5–week subject, as are clerkships in internal medicine, surgery, pediatrics, obstetrics/gynecology, and psychiatry.<br>3)As a tutorial training system has been established, general practitioners are contributing to medical education as clinical instructors.

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