Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore.
Medical School, Swansea University, Swansea, UK.
Med Teach. 2020 Jul;42(7):772-775. doi: 10.1080/0142159X.2020.1757635. Epub 2020 May 13.
Health Professions' Educators (HPEs) and their learners have to adapt their educational provision to rapidly changing and uncertain circumstances linked to the COVID-19 pandemic. This paper reports on an AMEE-hosted webinar: . Attended by over 500 colleagues from five continents, this webinar focused on the impact of the virus across the continuum of education and training. Short formal presentations on teaching and learning, assessment, selection and postgraduate training generated wide-ranging questions via the Chatbox. A thematic analysis of the Chatbox thread indicated the most pressing concerns and challenges educators were experiencing in having to adapt programmes and learning across the continuum of medical education and training. The main areas of concern were: campus-based teaching and learning; clinical teaching; selection and assessment, and educator needs. While there is clearly no one simple solution to the unprecedented issues medical education and training face currently, there were two over-arching messages. First, this is a time for colleagues across the globe to help and support each other. Second, many local responses and innovations could have the potential to change the shape of medical education and training in the future.
健康职业教育者(HPEs)及其学习者必须适应与 COVID-19 大流行相关的快速变化和不确定的情况。本文报告了由 AMEE 主办的网络研讨会: 。来自五大洲的 500 多名同事参加了此次网络研讨会,重点关注病毒对教育和培训各个阶段的影响。关于教学和学习、评估、选拔和研究生培训的简短正式演讲通过聊天框引发了广泛的问题。对聊天框线程的主题分析表明,教育者在必须适应整个医学教育和培训连续体中的课程和学习方面,正在经历最紧迫的关注和挑战。主要关注领域包括:基于校园的教学;临床教学;选拔和评估以及教育者的需求。虽然目前医学教育和培训面临的前所未有的问题显然没有一个简单的解决方案,但有两个总体信息。首先,这是全球同事互相帮助和支持的时候了。其次,许多当地的应对措施和创新有可能改变未来医学教育和培训的格局。