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Journal ArticleDOI

Competency-based medical education: theory to practice.

TLDR
The evolution of CBME from the outcomes movement in the 20th century to a renewed approach that, focused on accountability and curricular outcomes and organized around competencies, promotes greater learner-centredness and de-emphasizes time-based curricular design is described.
Abstract
Although competency-based medical education (CBME) has attracted renewed interest in recent years among educators and policy-makers in the health care professions, there is little agreement on many aspects of this paradigm. We convened a unique partnership – the International CBME Collaborators – to examine conceptual issues and current debates in CBME. We engaged in a multi-stage group process and held a consensus conference with the aim of reviewing the scholarly literature of competency-based medical education, identifying controversies in need of clarification, proposing definitions and concepts that could be useful to educators across many jurisdictions, and exploring future directions for this approach to preparing health professionals. In this paper, we describe the evolution of CBME from the outcomes movement in the 20th century to a renewed approach that, focused on accountability and curricular outcomes and organized around competencies, promotes greater learner-centredness and de-emphasizes time-based curricular design. In this paradigm, competence and related terms are redefined to emphasize their multi-dimensional, dynamic, developmental, and contextual nature. CBME therefore has significant implications for the planning of medical curricula and will have an important impact in reshaping the enterprise of medical education. We elaborate on this emerging CBME approach and its related concepts, and invite medical educators everywhere to enter into further dialogue about the promise and the potential perils of competency-based medical curricula for the 21st century.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Simulation in healthcare education: A best evidence practical guide. AMEE Guide No. 82

TL;DR: This Guide provides practical guidance to aid educators in effectively using simulation for training, and will focus on the educational principles that lead to effective learning, and include topics such as feedback and debriefing, deliberate practice, and curriculum integration – all central to simulation efficacy.
Journal ArticleDOI

The role of assessment in competency-based medical education

TL;DR: Given the importance of assessment and evaluation for CBME, the medical education community will need more collaborative research to address several major challenges in assessment, including “best practices” in the context of systems and institutional culture and how to best to train faculty to be better evaluators.
Journal ArticleDOI

Curriculum development for the workplace using Entrustable Professional Activities (EPAs): AMEE Guide No. 99.

TL;DR: The Guide first introduces concepts and definitions related to EPAs and then guidance for their identification, elaboration and validation, while clarifying common misunderstandings about EPAs.
Journal ArticleDOI

How self-determination theory can assist our understanding of the teaching and learning processes in medical education. AMEE Guide No. 59

TL;DR: Self-Determination Theory (SDT) as mentioned in this paper is one of the current major motivational theories in psychology and has been applied in many areas, among which are education and health care, but its applications in medical education are rare.
Journal ArticleDOI

Toward a common taxonomy of competency domains for the health professions and competencies for physicians.

TL;DR: The authors aim to extract a common set of competencies for physicians from existing health professions’ competency frameworks that would be robust enough to provide a single, relevant infrastructure for curricular resources in the Association of American Medical Colleges’ (AAMC) MedEdPORTAL and Curriculum Inventory and Reports (CIR) sites.
References
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Book

Basic Principles of Curriculum and Instruction

TL;DR: Tyler's book outlines one way of viewing an instructional program as a functioning instrument of education by developing a rationale for studying them, and suggests procedures for formulating answers and evaluating programs of study.
Journal ArticleDOI

Defining and Assessing Professional Competence

TL;DR: An inclusive definition of competence is generated: the habitual and judicious use of communication, knowledge, technical skills, clinical reasoning, emotions, values, and reflection in daily practice for the benefit of the individual and the community being served.
Journal ArticleDOI

Deliberate practice and the acquisition and maintenance of expert performance in medicine and related domains.

TL;DR: This article proposes an alternative framework to account for individual differences in attained professional development, as well as many aspects of age-related decline, based on the assumption that acquisition of expert performance requires engagement in deliberate practice and that continued deliberate practice is necessary for maintenance of many types of professional performance.
BookDOI

The Cambridge handbook of expertise and expert performance

TL;DR: In this article, K. Anders Ericsson and K.H. Chi introduce the Cambridge handbook of expertise and expert performance, its development, organization, and content, and two approaches to the study of experts' characteristics.
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