The Development of instructional strategies by clinical medical school faculty

This study described the instructional practices of selected clinical medical school faculty. It addressed the following questions: - how do medical and surgical clinical faculty select/design and combine instructional methods and media in teaching clinical content? - what influences clinical...

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Main Author: Kazemekas, Lynn M.
Other Authors: Instructional Technology
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/37230
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-02012006-141712/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-372302021-04-28T05:32:13Z The Development of instructional strategies by clinical medical school faculty Kazemekas, Lynn M. Instructional Technology Burton, John K. Head, J. Thomas Moore, David M. Nespor, Jan K. LD5655.V856 1991.K394 Clinical medicine -- Study and teaching Medical colleges -- Faculty Medicine -- Study and teaching This study described the instructional practices of selected clinical medical school faculty. It addressed the following questions: - how do medical and surgical clinical faculty select/design and combine instructional methods and media in teaching clinical content? - what influences clinical faculty use of a particular method or medium for clinical teaching? The primary purpose of this research was to investigate how clinical medical school faculty make pedagogical decisions and carry out their instruction in clinical patient care settings. The research described the clinical faculty members' instructional practices with medical students and how the medical apprenticeship system is used for their clinical instruction. The research involved two medical schools and a sample of four clinical faculty representing surgical and medical practice. A general method of descriptive research was employed including the data-gathering techniques of participant observation, interviewing, and collection of documents. Strategies developed by Spradley (1980) and Erickson (1986) were used for data analysis. Findings indicated that the sample clinical faculty do not use an instructional planning process such as described by Gagne and Briggs (1979) or Wildman and Burton (1981). Instead, they select instructional methods and media intuitively, carefully monitoring the medical students' reactions to their instruction. The data show the instructional techniques that include the human element -- defined here as personcentered methods -- are selected most often. Ed. D. 2014-03-14T21:08:57Z 2014-03-14T21:08:57Z 1991-04-05 2006-02-01 2006-02-01 2006-02-01 Dissertation Text etd-02012006-141712 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/37230 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-02012006-141712/ en OCLC# 24356513 LD5655.V856_1991.K394.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ iv, 143 leaves BTD application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic LD5655.V856 1991.K394
Clinical medicine -- Study and teaching
Medical colleges -- Faculty
Medicine -- Study and teaching
spellingShingle LD5655.V856 1991.K394
Clinical medicine -- Study and teaching
Medical colleges -- Faculty
Medicine -- Study and teaching
Kazemekas, Lynn M.
The Development of instructional strategies by clinical medical school faculty
description This study described the instructional practices of selected clinical medical school faculty. It addressed the following questions: - how do medical and surgical clinical faculty select/design and combine instructional methods and media in teaching clinical content? - what influences clinical faculty use of a particular method or medium for clinical teaching? The primary purpose of this research was to investigate how clinical medical school faculty make pedagogical decisions and carry out their instruction in clinical patient care settings. The research described the clinical faculty members' instructional practices with medical students and how the medical apprenticeship system is used for their clinical instruction. The research involved two medical schools and a sample of four clinical faculty representing surgical and medical practice. A general method of descriptive research was employed including the data-gathering techniques of participant observation, interviewing, and collection of documents. Strategies developed by Spradley (1980) and Erickson (1986) were used for data analysis. Findings indicated that the sample clinical faculty do not use an instructional planning process such as described by Gagne and Briggs (1979) or Wildman and Burton (1981). Instead, they select instructional methods and media intuitively, carefully monitoring the medical students' reactions to their instruction. The data show the instructional techniques that include the human element -- defined here as personcentered methods -- are selected most often. === Ed. D.
author2 Instructional Technology
author_facet Instructional Technology
Kazemekas, Lynn M.
author Kazemekas, Lynn M.
author_sort Kazemekas, Lynn M.
title The Development of instructional strategies by clinical medical school faculty
title_short The Development of instructional strategies by clinical medical school faculty
title_full The Development of instructional strategies by clinical medical school faculty
title_fullStr The Development of instructional strategies by clinical medical school faculty
title_full_unstemmed The Development of instructional strategies by clinical medical school faculty
title_sort development of instructional strategies by clinical medical school faculty
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/37230
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-02012006-141712/
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