학술논문

Student perspective on outcomes and process – Recommendations for implementing competency-based medical education.
Document Type
Article
Source
Medical Teacher. Feb2019, Vol. 41 Issue 2, p161-166. 6p.
Subject
*ACADEMIC achievement
*OUTCOME-based education
*CURRICULUM planning
*CURRICULUM
*HEALTH care teams
*MEDICAL education
*PSYCHOLOGY of medical students
*MOTIVATION (Psychology)
*PROFESSIONAL employee training
*READABILITY (Literary style)
*THEMATIC analysis
*EDUCATIONAL outcomes
*NATIONAL competency-based educational tests
Language
ISSN
0142-159X
Abstract
Purpose: Competency-based medical education (CBME) seeks to prepare undergraduate and postgraduate trainees for clinical practice. Its major emphasis is on outcomes, but questions about how best to reach these remain. One key issue is the need to integrate what matters most to students when setting educational goals: this is crucial if we are to design curricula that trainees understand and engage with, and that promote successful achievement of competencies. Method: We interviewed medical students in years 4 and 6 of a 6-year medical degree and used thematic analysis to understand their main educational priorities and how these fit with the aims of CBME. Results: Two major themes emerged: features of content and process. For content, students wanted clear guidance on what constitutes competence, finding broad outcome statements abstract and difficult to understand as novices. They also attach critical importance to features of process such as being welcomed, included in clinical teams and being known personally – these promote motivation, understanding, and professional development. Conclusions: We present recommendations for those designing CBME curricula to emphasize the student perspective: what kind of guidance on outcomes is required, and features of process that must not be neglected if competence is to be achieved. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]