Creativity in Medical Learning: A direction-finding study of junior hospital doctors

In a questionnaire study of creativity, the author has assessed the teaching and clinical practice of medical teachers, as observed by their students. The study has taken some preliminary steps to assess the place of creativity in postgraduate medical learning in the United Kingdom. Junior doctors w...

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Main Author: Martin Talbot
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University College London 2006-04-01
Series:Educate~
Online Access:http://www.educatejournal.org/index.php?journal=educate&page=article&op=view&path%5B%5D=12
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spelling doaj-4862aec9ff674852a0a895c28080025b2020-11-25T01:16:31ZengUniversity College London Educate~1477-55572006-04-01216475Creativity in Medical Learning: A direction-finding study of junior hospital doctorsMartin TalbotIn a questionnaire study of creativity, the author has assessed the teaching and clinical practice of medical teachers, as observed by their students. The study has taken some preliminary steps to assess the place of creativity in postgraduate medical learning in the United Kingdom. Junior doctors were asked to compare their ‘best’ teacher with their ‘worst’ utilising a semantic differential scale and questions derived from Torrance’s definitions of creativity. The response rate was 81 (56.25%) of 144 junior hospital doctors, in whose view, ‘best’ teachers showed greater creative behaviour as evidenced by significantly higher creativity scores on the majority of parameters (p<0.0001). http://www.educatejournal.org/index.php?journal=educate&page=article&op=view&path%5B%5D=12
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Martin Talbot
spellingShingle Martin Talbot
Creativity in Medical Learning: A direction-finding study of junior hospital doctors
Educate~
author_facet Martin Talbot
author_sort Martin Talbot
title Creativity in Medical Learning: A direction-finding study of junior hospital doctors
title_short Creativity in Medical Learning: A direction-finding study of junior hospital doctors
title_full Creativity in Medical Learning: A direction-finding study of junior hospital doctors
title_fullStr Creativity in Medical Learning: A direction-finding study of junior hospital doctors
title_full_unstemmed Creativity in Medical Learning: A direction-finding study of junior hospital doctors
title_sort creativity in medical learning: a direction-finding study of junior hospital doctors
publisher University College London
series Educate~
issn 1477-5557
publishDate 2006-04-01
description In a questionnaire study of creativity, the author has assessed the teaching and clinical practice of medical teachers, as observed by their students. The study has taken some preliminary steps to assess the place of creativity in postgraduate medical learning in the United Kingdom. Junior doctors were asked to compare their ‘best’ teacher with their ‘worst’ utilising a semantic differential scale and questions derived from Torrance’s definitions of creativity. The response rate was 81 (56.25%) of 144 junior hospital doctors, in whose view, ‘best’ teachers showed greater creative behaviour as evidenced by significantly higher creativity scores on the majority of parameters (p<0.0001).
url http://www.educatejournal.org/index.php?journal=educate&page=article&op=view&path%5B%5D=12
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