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Hands-on – general medicine – Circuit-training in the auditorium – a practical equivalent to a lecture

Introduction: Traditional university teaching formats are of limited use when it comes to conveying the inner workings and specific remit of general medicine in a practical way. Small supervised groups present themselves as a plausible and effective alternative for learning to interact with patients...

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Autores principales: Blank, Wolfgang A., Blankenfeld, Hannes, Beck, Anton J., Frangoulis, Anna-Maria, Vorderwülbecke, Florian, Fleischmann, Andreas
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: German Medical Science GMS Publishing House 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4152991/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25228929
http://dx.doi.org/10.3205/zma000919
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author Blank, Wolfgang A.
Blankenfeld, Hannes
Beck, Anton J.
Frangoulis, Anna-Maria
Vorderwülbecke, Florian
Fleischmann, Andreas
author_facet Blank, Wolfgang A.
Blankenfeld, Hannes
Beck, Anton J.
Frangoulis, Anna-Maria
Vorderwülbecke, Florian
Fleischmann, Andreas
author_sort Blank, Wolfgang A.
collection PubMed
description Introduction: Traditional university teaching formats are of limited use when it comes to conveying the inner workings and specific remit of general medicine in a practical way. Small supervised groups present themselves as a plausible and effective alternative for learning to interact with patients in low prevalence areas. Description of the project: A frontal lecture was transformed into an interactive seminar-like lecture for 280 students. Short kick-off presentations served as an introduction to rotating circuit stations. Knowledge, skills and professional attitude specific to general and family medicine were intensively trained by 28 small groups in and around the auditorium by means of activating didactic methods. The small groups were supervised by experienced GP’s trained as tutors. During six days, consisting of 3.5 hour sessions per day, working methods, a large variety of common medical conditions, preventive primary care and care for the elderly were amongst the topics addressed. Results: This new format was successfully implemented and developed with regards to content as well as organisation. Well over 90% of the 274 participating students evaluated tutors’ commitment, coherent delivery of content, learner-oriented atmosphere and practical focus positively. Given the advantages of a small-group learning situation, the somewhat cramped conditions were accepted by 92%. Discussion: The innovative concept was able to work successfully within the specific framework of patient care in a general and family medicine setting. A creative approach to the lack of space managed to mobilise resources for practical small-group work. Being able to work on specific general practice problems in a small-group setting and immediately reflect upon them was rated positively overall. Conclusions: Responsibilities and specific working methods in general practice / family medicine can be trained successfully even with large groups of students when limited space is used creatively. In a supervised circuit-training setting, students are able to apply their existing knowledge and skills in a practical way. Further research is needed to assess individual learning success and gains in competence under this novel learning situation.
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spelling pubmed-41529912014-09-16 Hands-on – general medicine – Circuit-training in the auditorium – a practical equivalent to a lecture Blank, Wolfgang A. Blankenfeld, Hannes Beck, Anton J. Frangoulis, Anna-Maria Vorderwülbecke, Florian Fleischmann, Andreas GMS Z Med Ausbild Article Introduction: Traditional university teaching formats are of limited use when it comes to conveying the inner workings and specific remit of general medicine in a practical way. Small supervised groups present themselves as a plausible and effective alternative for learning to interact with patients in low prevalence areas. Description of the project: A frontal lecture was transformed into an interactive seminar-like lecture for 280 students. Short kick-off presentations served as an introduction to rotating circuit stations. Knowledge, skills and professional attitude specific to general and family medicine were intensively trained by 28 small groups in and around the auditorium by means of activating didactic methods. The small groups were supervised by experienced GP’s trained as tutors. During six days, consisting of 3.5 hour sessions per day, working methods, a large variety of common medical conditions, preventive primary care and care for the elderly were amongst the topics addressed. Results: This new format was successfully implemented and developed with regards to content as well as organisation. Well over 90% of the 274 participating students evaluated tutors’ commitment, coherent delivery of content, learner-oriented atmosphere and practical focus positively. Given the advantages of a small-group learning situation, the somewhat cramped conditions were accepted by 92%. Discussion: The innovative concept was able to work successfully within the specific framework of patient care in a general and family medicine setting. A creative approach to the lack of space managed to mobilise resources for practical small-group work. Being able to work on specific general practice problems in a small-group setting and immediately reflect upon them was rated positively overall. Conclusions: Responsibilities and specific working methods in general practice / family medicine can be trained successfully even with large groups of students when limited space is used creatively. In a supervised circuit-training setting, students are able to apply their existing knowledge and skills in a practical way. Further research is needed to assess individual learning success and gains in competence under this novel learning situation. German Medical Science GMS Publishing House 2014-08-15 /pmc/articles/PMC4152991/ /pubmed/25228929 http://dx.doi.org/10.3205/zma000919 Text en Copyright © 2014 Blank et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/). You are free to copy, distribute and transmit the work, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Article
Blank, Wolfgang A.
Blankenfeld, Hannes
Beck, Anton J.
Frangoulis, Anna-Maria
Vorderwülbecke, Florian
Fleischmann, Andreas
Hands-on – general medicine – Circuit-training in the auditorium – a practical equivalent to a lecture
title Hands-on – general medicine – Circuit-training in the auditorium – a practical equivalent to a lecture
title_full Hands-on – general medicine – Circuit-training in the auditorium – a practical equivalent to a lecture
title_fullStr Hands-on – general medicine – Circuit-training in the auditorium – a practical equivalent to a lecture
title_full_unstemmed Hands-on – general medicine – Circuit-training in the auditorium – a practical equivalent to a lecture
title_short Hands-on – general medicine – Circuit-training in the auditorium – a practical equivalent to a lecture
title_sort hands-on – general medicine – circuit-training in the auditorium – a practical equivalent to a lecture
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4152991/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25228929
http://dx.doi.org/10.3205/zma000919
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