Trends in Medical Education Research
- 1 October 2004
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Academic Medicine
- Vol. 79 (10) , 939-947
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00001888-200410000-00008
Abstract
The medical education community is reflecting increasingly on the role and nature of research in the field. Useful sources of data to include in these reflections are a description of the topics in which we are investing our energies, an analysis of the extent to which there is a sense of progress on these topics, and an examination of the mechanisms by which any progress has been achieved. This article presents the results of a thematic review of the medical education research literature in four key journals since the turn of the 21st century. It describes four examples of areas in which the community appears to be investing its energies: curriculum and teaching issues, skills and attitudes relevant to the structure of the profession, individual characteristics of medical students, and the evaluation of students and residents. A discussion of the recent publications in these domains highlights a distinction between thematic categories of research, in which many members of the community are working on the same topic, and programmatic lines of research, in which members of the community are working together toward the shared goal of consensual understanding. The author suggests that community-level, programmatic lines of research are necessary to build knowledge and understanding of a domain and that, in the absence of such communal effort, the value of research is limited to the uncoordinated accrual of information.Keywords
This publication has 139 references indexed in Scilit:
- The quality of a simulation examination using a high-fidelity child manikinMedical Education, 2003
- A Liberal Arts Education as Preparation for Medical School: How Is it Valued? How Do Graduates Perform?Academic Medicine, 2003
- Selection for medical school: just pick the right students and the rest is easy!Medical Education, 2003
- The Roles of Nature and Nurture in the Recruitment and Retention of Primary Care Physicians in Rural AreasAcademic Medicine, 2002
- Assessing Quality and Costs of Education in the Ambulatory SettingAcademic Medicine, 2002
- Can Medical School Admission Committee Members Predict Which Applicants Will Choose Primary Care Careers?Academic Medicine, 2002
- Gender and achievement in clinical medical students: a path analysisMedical Education, 2001
- Standard setting in an objective structured clinical examination: use of global ratings of borderline performance to determine the passing scoreMedical Education, 2001
- Using Standardized Patients as TeachersAcademic Medicine, 2001
- Gender and Preceptorsʼ Feedback to StudentsAcademic Medicine, 2000