Muller Jessica H, Jain Sharad, Loeser Helen, Irby David M
Department of Family and Community Medicine, School of Medicine, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, California 94143-0900, USA.
Med Educ. 2008 Aug;42(8):778-85. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2923.2008.03110.x.
Recent educational reform in US medical schools has created integrated curricular structures. This study investigated how stakeholders in a newly integrated curriculum - students, course directors and curriculum leaders - define integration and perceive its successes and challenges during its first year.
We conducted interviews with curriculum reform leaders, course directors and first year medical students. Interview transcripts were analysed for themes, which were compared within and across stakeholder groups.
Three curriculum leaders, four Year 1 course directors and six Year 1 medical students were interviewed. Fifteen students participated in a group interview. Four major themes emerged: interdisciplinary teaching; interdisciplinary faculty collaboration; building curricular links, and sequencing and framing curricular content. Cross-group analysis revealed participant agreement that an integrated curriculum required interdisciplinary teaching, clinical application and careful oversight. Differences among groups were also identified. Faculty (course directors and curriculum leaders) discussed faculty collaboration and the challenges of faculty buy-in and course implementation. Students highlighted the impact of integration on their learning and the challenges of sequencing and scaffolding content. Both students and course directors focused on course monitoring and conceptual links for student learning.
Integrating a curriculum is a complex process. It is differentially understood and experienced by students and faculty, and can refer to instructional method, content, faculty work or synthesis of knowledge in the minds of learners. It can occur at different rates and some subjects are integrated more easily than others. We point to some specific considerations as medical schools embark on curriculum reform.
美国医学院校近期的教育改革创建了整合课程结构。本研究调查了新整合课程中的利益相关者——学生、课程主任和课程负责人——如何定义整合,以及在整合课程的第一年如何看待其成功之处和面临的挑战。
我们对课程改革负责人、课程主任和一年级医学生进行了访谈。对访谈记录进行主题分析,并在利益相关者群体内部和群体之间进行比较。
访谈了三位课程负责人、四位一年级课程主任和六位一年级医学生。15名学生参加了小组访谈。出现了四个主要主题:跨学科教学;跨学科教师合作;建立课程联系,以及课程内容的排序和框架构建。跨群体分析显示,参与者一致认为整合课程需要跨学科教学、临床应用和仔细监督。各群体之间也存在差异。教师(课程主任和课程负责人)讨论了教师合作以及教师接受和课程实施方面的挑战。学生们强调了整合对他们学习的影响以及内容排序和搭建支架方面的挑战。学生和课程主任都关注课程监控以及学生学习的概念性联系。
整合课程是一个复杂的过程。学生和教师对其理解和体验各不相同,它可以指教学方法、内容、教师工作或学习者头脑中的知识综合。整合可以以不同的速度进行,有些学科比其他学科更容易整合。我们指出了医学院校在进行课程改革时需要考虑的一些具体因素。