The curriculum: overloaded and too general?
- 1 May 1987
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Medical Education
- Vol. 21 (3) , 183-188
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2923.1987.tb00689.x
Abstract
Two educational implications of the prototype view of categorization of medical disorders in the long-term memory of medical students are tested: first, that categories are better learned when the initial exposure is through representative exemplars, the prototypes as opposed to the whole range of instances; second, that concepts are initially learned at an intermediate level of abstraction (e.g. angina pectoris), corresponding to the prototypes, as opposed to more general levels (e.g. coronary disorders). In a group of third-year medical students (n = 42) taken from a previous study, the recall frequencies of undergraduate course materials in eight system courses are inversely related to the number of disorders presented, r(6) = -0.58, P = 0.06. The recall frequencies are highest for courses with the highest proportion of intermediate-level materials, r(6) = 0.73, P = 0.02. The implications of these results for curriculum design are discussed.Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- The structure of medical knowledge in the memories of medical students and general practitioners: categories and prototypesMedical Education, 1984
- Effects of lecture information density on medical student achievementAcademic Medicine, 1984
- Acquisition of Basic Object Categories by Severely Handicapped ChildrenChild Development, 1982
- Order of Acquisition of Subordinate-, Basic-, and Superordinate-Level CategoriesChild Development, 1982
- Human Learning and MemoryAnnual Review of Psychology, 1981
- Acquisition of basic object categoriesCognitive Psychology, 1980
- Family resemblances: Studies in the internal structure of categoriesCognitive Psychology, 1975