Friday, August 3, 2007

Family Medicine: Reality Check!


I've been gathering opinions on how best to set up Family Medicine in the curriculum. There is resounding support for the regular appearance of a generalist who could position the week's lecture material into real clinical contexts.

This happened last year (by chance?) when Dr. WR gave a talk on commonly encountered infections during the ID block. T M (VP Academic) says that it's the one lecture everybody remembers from Family Medicine.

I'd like to have this kind of "Primary Care: Reality Check" scheduled for one hour in prime time (9:30-11:30) on a weekly or biweekly basis in Phases 1 and 2.

I think the students would love it.
I think it would go some way toward reconciling the content-rich mornings with the clinical process afternoons.

(I do understand that it might be difficult to fully schedule by this September...)

I wonder what you think.

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

My First 3 Weeks - Keeping Busy



  • Meetings
  • Clerkship MCQ
  • Clinical Skill/PBL
  • Undergrad Evaluations/Objectives
  • Phase 3 Website
  • Clerks
  • Phases 1 and 2

Thursday, June 28, 2007

Passion


Here's some of what I'm thinking about lectures: I want to get away from the 'soft' stuff that usually falls to us ( e.g., empathy) and accentuate the practical clinical stuff we do everyday. (not that empathy is unimportant, but that lectures are the worst way to 'teach' it). Secondly, I want to de-emphasize specific content goals and prioritize passion - that is, have teachers choose the practical common stuff that they LOVE. There's no substitute for enthusiasm.

So... what would you LOVE to teach?

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Vision


When Queen's med students are asked "What works well in your med school curriculum?"
I want them to say "Family Medicine".

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

Legitimacy



What helps to bring legitimacy to a curriculum?

Alignment:
  • anchored objectives
  • productive learning context
  • reality-based evaluation

Tuesday, June 5, 2007

Bonk on Visual Learning












What I picked up from Curtis Bonk
(http://www.orion.on.ca/2007orionsummit/curtbonk.html)

The web has great potential for visual learning.

Things to try:
- Have a small movie to start
- Expert in action
- Case
- Reflective questions and ppt to "wrap-around" the film

- Students make their own film - leading to film festival (all Freshmen at Duke are required to do this!)

- "moodle" on-line learning environment

- ip-based video conferencing is free! - get an expert to show up in real time.