New Directions in Medical e-Curricula and the Use of Digital Repositories
- 1 March 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Academic Medicine
- Vol. 79 (3) , 229-235
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00001888-200403000-00006
Abstract
Medical educators involved in the growth of multimedia-enhanced e-curricula are increasingly aware of the need for digital repositories to catalogue, store and ensure access to learning objects that are integrated within their online material. The experience at the Faculty of Medicine at McGill University during initial development of a mainstream electronic curriculum reflects this growing recognition that repositories can facilitate the development of a more comprehensive as well as effective electronic curricula. Also, digital repositories can help to ensure efficient utilization of resources through the use, re-use, and reprocessing of multimedia learning, addressing the potential for collaboration among repositories and increasing available material exponentially. The authors review different approaches to the development of a digital repository application, as well as global and specific issues that should be examined in the initial requirements definition and development phase, to ensure current initiatives meet long-term requirements. Often, decisions regarding creation of e-curricula and associated digital repositories are left to interested faculty and their individual development teams. However, the development of an e-curricula and digital repository is not predominantly a technical exercise, but rather one that affects global pedagogical strategies and curricular content and involves a commitment of large-scale resources. Outcomes of these decisions can have long-term consequences and as such, should involve faculty at the highest levels including the dean.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- Development of an Undergraduate Medical CurriculumAcademic Medicine, 2003
- Introducing HEALAcademic Medicine, 2003
- A Web-based Database for Sharing Educational Multimedia within and among Medical SchoolsAcademic Medicine, 2001
- Computer assisted learning in undergraduate medical educationBMJ, 2001
- Electronic Health Record Meets Digital Library: A New Environment for Achieving an Old GoalJournal of the American Medical Informatics Association, 2000
- Solutions to Challenges Facing a University Digital Library and PressJournal of the American Medical Informatics Association, 2000
- Maintaining the Characteristics of Effective Clinical Teachers in Computer Assisted Learning Environments.Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2000
- DiscussionInformation Processing & Management, 1999
- A collaborative virtual medicine libraryAcademic Medicine, 1999
- Learning with MediaReview of Educational Research, 1991