Tuesday, 18 March 2014

Evaluating Teaching - Quantity and Quality (Methods and Examples) + comparison with traditional research metrics















(Illustration and documentation of the presentation material at this AMEE 2014 TeL symposium, some pictures of the event, link to archived video of symposium (which includes over an hour of interactive Q and A with the panel), audience engagement statistics (quantitative), as well as audience comments (qualitative). Further elaboration on the content presented in this symposium has been submitted as article to Medical Teacher)



(Illustration and documentation of the presentation material for this TeL interactive roundtable discussion with the audience at 11th APMEC 2014, including panelists slides, some pictures of the event, online audience viewership (quantitative), audience questions posed, as well as post event reflective comments by each panelist. This is part of a process to make teaching not only scholarly, but a piece of scholarship, with public dissemination of the teaching material, a continuing attempt to measure the impact of teaching, documented self reflection on teaching, and invitations for peer review through the website, and other platforms through symposia and conference presentations, and peer reviewed publications)

eScholarship which also highlights article




(Feedback above from Professor Ann King, Hong Kong)




























































original above, with revised table below (Apr 27, 2014)



vs










































"one of 20 to 30 people in the world with the expert knowledge to judge whether the articles cited the relevant literature, represented it accurately, addressed important issues in the field, and made an original contribution to knowledge" (Hugh Gusterson on the academic peer review process, see website above)











Wednesday, 19 February 2014

Sunday, 16 February 2014

Applying the 4C-ID model to learning to play the guitar. How can we translate these insights to medical education?


                                            


                                           


                                          


                                         




                                          









                                          



                                          

                                          





                                          



                                          



                                          



                                          






                                          



                                         



                                          







                                          



                                          






                                         


                                         


                                         


                                         



                                          


                                         







                                          










Thursday, 6 February 2014

Neuroradiology Resident vs Neuroradiology Fellow Mentorship Conversations

Neuroradiology Resident

R1

Tell me about your background (medical school, clinical experience, radiology experience)

Review of Royal College of Radiology (UK) curriculum, curated and customised further below.

Specialty training curriculum for clinical radiology (Royal College of Radiologists, UK)

           Applied curriculum for NUHS neuroradiology residency


Emphasis on the roles and key competencies of a radiologist

Cognitive apprenticeship

How radiology experts think and the value of online repositories

Some tips on motivation, time and effort allocation

Literature on the learning process

Mastery training in diagnostic radiology (Slideshare presentation)

Case review strategies for residents and fellows


Neuroradiology Fellow

Tell me about your background

List your objectives for the neuroradiology fellowship

Spend first month working through weekly assignments, with feedback on clinical practice and discussion on the training process

Monthly meetings to map progress (foundation building, focus on learning process, learning how to learn, competency building, and planning projects)

American Society of Neuroradiology

         Certificate of added qualification in neuroradiology

http://www.ajnr.org/

Neurographics

European Society of Neuroradiology

         European school of Neuroradiology


Case review strategy for residents and fellows