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Innovative tracks at established institutions for the education of health personnel : an experimental approach to change relevant to health needs / Martin Kantrowitz ... [et al.]

Contributor(s): Kantrowitz, Martin | Kaufman, Arthur | Mennin, Stewart | Fülöp, Tam'as | Guilbert, Jean-Jacques | Network of Community-Oriented Educational Institutions for Health Sciences | World Health OrganizationMaterial type: TextTextSeries: WHO offset publication ; no. 101Publication details: Geneva : World Health Organization, 1987. Description: 232 pISBN: 9241701013Subject(s): Education, Medical -- trends | Organization of Health Care and Social DevelopmentNLM classification: W 18Online resources: Click here to access online | Click here to access online Abstract: Provides a highly practical and instructive guide for educators seeking to reform programmes and methods of teaching at established medical schools. Focused on practical problems, the book describes an approach to change involving the establishment of an innovative curricular track as a curriculum distinct from, but running parallel with, the already existing curriculum. To facilitate understanding of how the strategy works in real situations, the book draws upon ideas, experiences, and discussions presented during a conference attended by educators at eight institutions that have used the track approach as an agent of change, some for as long as 15 years. Though the institutions, located in China, Mexico, the Philippines, Thailand, and the United States of America, represent widely divergent needs and circumstances, all have used the track approach to reform medical education in the direction of greater relevance to health needs or by using problem-based learning in the educational process. The core text of the book sets out detailed case studies for each of the eight institutions. Presented in a spirit of frank self-analysis, these studies document the range of different problems, constraints, successes, mistakes and surprises that characterized the evolution of innovative track programmes in real situations. The reliance on first-hand experiences, whether at the Shanghai Second Medical University or Harvard Medical School, further helps account for the sense of excitement and innovation present throughout the book.
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Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books WHO HQ
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Books Books WHO HQ
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W 18 87IN (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 3 Available O40207

Provides a highly practical and instructive guide for educators seeking to reform programmes and methods of teaching at established medical schools. Focused on practical problems, the book describes an approach to change involving the establishment of an innovative curricular track as a curriculum distinct from, but running parallel with, the already existing curriculum. To facilitate understanding of how the strategy works in real situations, the book draws upon ideas, experiences, and discussions presented during a conference attended by educators at eight institutions that have used the track approach as an agent of change, some for as long as 15 years. Though the institutions, located in China, Mexico, the Philippines, Thailand, and the United States of America, represent widely divergent needs and circumstances, all have used the track approach to reform medical education in the direction of greater relevance to health needs or by using problem-based learning in the educational process. The core text of the book sets out detailed case studies for each of the eight institutions. Presented in a spirit of frank self-analysis, these studies document the range of different problems, constraints, successes, mistakes and surprises that characterized the evolution of innovative track programmes in real situations. The reliance on first-hand experiences, whether at the Shanghai Second Medical University or Harvard Medical School, further helps account for the sense of excitement and innovation present throughout the book.

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