Division of Anatomy and Pathology, Department of Basic Sciences, Touro University College of Osteopathic Medicine, Henderson, Nevada, USA.
Anat Sci Educ. 2010 Sep-Oct;3(5):249-53. doi: 10.1002/ase.168.
From the early 19th century until the most recent two decades, open-space and satellite museums featuring anatomy and pathology collections (collectively referred to as "medical museums") had leading roles in medical education. However, many factors have caused these roles to diminish dramatically in recent years. Chief among these are the great advances in information technology and web-based learning that are currently at play in every level of medical training. Some medical schools have abandoned their museums while others have gradually given away their museums' contents to devote former museum space to new classrooms, lecture halls, and laboratories. These trends have accelerated as medical school enrollment has increased and as increasing interest in biological and biomedical research activities have caused medical schools to convert museum space into research facilities. A few medical schools, however, have considered the contents of their museums as irreplaceable resources for modern medicine and medical education and the space these occupy as great environments for independent and self-directed learning. Consequently, some medical schools have updated their medical museums and equipped them with new technologies. The Anatomical Museum of Leiden University Medical Center in The Netherlands and the Medical Museum of Kawasaki Medical School in Kurashiki, Okayama, Japan, are two examples of such upgraded museums. Student surveys at Leiden University have indicated that all students (100%) found audio-guided museum tours to be useful for learning and majorities of them found guided tours to be clinically relevant (87%). However, 69% of students felt that museum visits should be optional rather than compulsory within the medical training curriculum.
从 19 世纪初到最近的二十年,以解剖学和病理学收藏为特色的开放空间和卫星博物馆(统称为“医学博物馆”)在医学教育中发挥了主导作用。然而,近年来,许多因素导致这些作用急剧下降。其中最重要的是信息技术和基于网络的学习的巨大进步,这些进步目前在医学培训的各个层面都在发挥作用。一些医学院已经放弃了他们的博物馆,而另一些则逐渐将博物馆的藏品转让给新的教室、演讲厅和实验室,以腾出前博物馆的空间。随着医学院的入学人数增加,以及对生物和生物医学研究活动的兴趣日益增加,导致医学院将博物馆空间转换为研究设施,这些趋势加速了。然而,有几所医学院认为他们的博物馆藏品是现代医学和医学教育不可或缺的资源,而这些藏品占据的空间是独立和自主学习的绝佳环境。因此,一些医学院更新了他们的医学博物馆,并配备了新技术。荷兰莱顿大学医学中心的解剖博物馆和日本冈山县仓敷市川崎医科大学的医学博物馆就是这样的升级博物馆的两个例子。莱顿大学的学生调查表明,所有学生(100%)都认为音频引导的博物馆参观对学习有用,大多数学生认为导游与临床相关(87%)。然而,69%的学生认为在医学培训课程中,博物馆参观应该是可选的,而不是必修的。