"The entire book is well written and easy to read. The content is clearly outlined and logically arranged. The book very nicely illustrates medical education principles with clinical examples relevant to pulmonary and critical care medicine. ... anesthesiologists involved in teaching or learning will welcome this book." (Cynthia Szalai and Frank Herbstreit, Anesthesia & Analgesia, Vol. 131 (3), September, 2020)
Introduction.- Section I: Teaching Different Levels of Learners.- Teaching Preclinical Medical Students.- Teaching Clinical Medical Students.- Teaching Residents.- Teaching Fellows.- Section II: Teaching in Different Settings.- Teaching in the Classroom: Large Groups.- Teaching in the Classroom: Small Groups.- Teaching at the Bedside.- Teaching in Clinic.- Teaching on the Wards.- Teaching in the ICU.- Section III: Unique Teaching Strategies.- Teaching Communication Skills.- Teaching with Simulation.- Procedural Teaching.- Distance and Web-Based Learning.- The Role of Feedback in Teaching.- Conclusion.
Patricia Kritek MD, EdM is the Professor of Medicine in the Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care, and Sleep Medicine at the University of Washington and the Associate Dean for Faculty Development, University of Washington School of Medicine. She has published widely on respiratory medicine, critical care medicine, and particularly, medical education and teaching.
Jeremy Richards, MD, MA is an Assistant Professor in the Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine at the Medical University of South Carolina. He is also the Fellowship Program Associate Director there. He has completed two medical education fellowships, and was the director for several courses for preclinical and clinical students.
This is a book for clinician educators. It offers modern, evidence-based practices to use in teaching learners at a range of levels, with an emphasis on concrete strategies that teachers can implement in their own clinical practices as well as in small and large group settings.
Medical education is rapidly changing with emerging evidence on best practices and a proliferation of new technologies. As strategies for effectively teaching medical learners evolve, it is important to understand the implications for Pulmonary, Critical Care, and Sleep Medicine (PCCM). This text is structured to allow easy access to the reader. Chapters are organized around level of learner (e.g., medical student to PCCM fellow to practicing physicians) as well as the location of teaching. Given the variety of clinical settings in which PCCM physicians teach, specific consideration of best practices, broad changes in curricular design and pedagogy are considered in different clinical contexts.
Each chapter begins with a focus on why the topic is important for clinician educators. A review of the available evidence and relevant medical education theory about the topic follows, with examples from specific studies that provide insight into best practices regarding the concepts and topics discussed in the chapter. For chapters focusing on learners, different environments are considered and similarly, if the focus is on the learning environment, attention is paid to the approach to different learners. Each chapter ends with a summary of the primary points from the chapter and concrete examples of how clinician teachers can put the concepts discussed in the chapter into practice. This is an ideal guide for educators in pulmonary, critical care, and sleep medicine.