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Full-Text Articles in Education

Research Advances In Conformity To Peer Pressure: A Negative Side Effect Of Medical Education, Tanya Beran Dec 2015

Research Advances In Conformity To Peer Pressure: A Negative Side Effect Of Medical Education, Tanya Beran

Health Professions Education

Curricula in medical education are intended to impart the knowledge, skills, and attitudes that students will require as physicians to meet patient needs. There are additional unarticulated and implicit messages that inherently emerge in medical education. This paper examines one such message: conformity to peers, whereby individuals repeat inaccurate information reported by peer group members. Empirical evidence from 60 years of social-psychological research demonstrates that this phenomenon of conformity occurs across experimental tasks, cultures, and over time. It has yet to be systematically studied in medical education. Emerging studies from the University of Calgary, Canada, and in collaboration with King …


Jefferson Interprofessional Education Center Teamstepps Workshops For Staff, Alan Forstater Md, Facep, Dimitri Papanagnou Md, Mph, Kevin Lyons Phd, Shoshana Sicks Med, Elizabeth Speakman Edd, Rn, Cde, Anef Nov 2015

Jefferson Interprofessional Education Center Teamstepps Workshops For Staff, Alan Forstater Md, Facep, Dimitri Papanagnou Md, Mph, Kevin Lyons Phd, Shoshana Sicks Med, Elizabeth Speakman Edd, Rn, Cde, Anef

Population Health Matters (Formerly Health Policy Newsletter)

No abstract provided.


The Use Of Pbl In An Interprofessional Education Course For Health Care Professional Students, Kristine M. L'Ecuyer, David Pole, Sheila A. Leander Mar 2015

The Use Of Pbl In An Interprofessional Education Course For Health Care Professional Students, Kristine M. L'Ecuyer, David Pole, Sheila A. Leander

Interdisciplinary Journal of Problem-Based Learning

A problem-based learning (PBL) framework was utilized in a series of six interprofessional team seminars (IPTS) for postbaccalaureate students from seven health professions. The goal of IPTS was to develop a collaborative practice-ready workforce prepared to respond to patient care needs through use of concrete examples, skills development, critical thinking, and problem solving in safe, faculty-facilitated small groups. The collaborative nature of PBL closely correlates with teaching methodologies of the IPTS series. This study analyzed critical reflection assignments of nursing students in accelerated programs to determine the effectiveness of IPTS at preparing students for interprofessional collaborative practice. Findings indicated that …