Integrated Curriculum In Health
Mostrando 13-17 de 17 artigos, teses e dissertações.
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13. Venus and Freud: an educational opportunity?
OBJECTIVE: To discuss the importance of genitourinary medicine as a core component for a new problem based medical undergraduate curriculum and to describe the advantages of consensus group method as a means of identifying learning objectives for an integrated course. METHODS: A group of experts in the field of sexual health was convened around the module on
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14. A strategy for curriculum integration of information skills instruction.
The ever increasing need of health professionals for information and the inclusion of active learning experiences in the medical school curriculum require that students learn the effective use of health information tools. Curriculum integration is gaining acceptance as an effective approach to teaching information skills in this setting. At the University of
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15. Integration of information-seeking skills and activities into a problem-based curriculum.
Recent trends in medical education include a shift from the traditional, didactic, lecture-oriented approach to a more student-driven, problem-based approach to learning. This trend provides librarians with an opportunity to develop programs to teach information-gathering skills that support and are integrated into problem-based learning (PBL). In 1992, the
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16. Emerging Disciplines in the Health Sciences and Their Impact on Health Sciences Libraries: The Behavioral Sciences *
Interest in human behavior has always been present in schools of medicine. Particularly since World War II, this interest has been amplified, as shown by a number of trends. These include increasing time in the medical school curriculum for the teaching of the behavioral sciences, increasing numbers of people on medical school faculties who are studying prob
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17. Family history and perceived vulnerability to some common diseases: a study of young people and their parents.
During the last two decades, health promotion has concentrated on lifestyle factors. However, recent research in genetics has shown that inherited susceptibility may be important in many common conditions. This raises questions about how these two different messages are integrated into people's beliefs about their own susceptibility. We report a study based