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Quality improvement in teaching medicine

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Title: Quality improvement in teaching medicine


1
Quality improvement in teaching medicine
  • Vladimir Bumbairevic

2
Teaching Medicine
Society
Patients
Teachers
Students
3
Teaching Medicine
Knowledge Skills Attitude
Practical Teaching
Formal Teaching
4
Curriculum
5
Thomas Huxley1825-1895
  • "The burden we place on the medical student is
    far too heavy, and it takes some doing to keep
    from breaking his intellectual back. A system of
    medical education that is actually calculated to
    obstruct the acquisition of sound knowledge and
    to heavily favour the crammer and the grinder is
    a disgrace.
  • 1876

6
Organising the overload
7
New curriculum models
  • Outcome-based education
  • Problem-based learning
  • Task-based learning
  • Core and student-selected components
  • An integrated system-based approach
  • A spiral curriculum

8
Classical (Subject based) curriculum
Clinical sciences
Basic sciences
Revised curriculum
Clinical sciences
Basic sciences
9
New Law on Higher Education
  • Quality Assurance in Higher Education
  • National Council and Commission for Accreditation
    and Quality Control
  • Quality Assurance Procedures at Universities
    including self-evaluation

10
Quality defined
For most people, quality is like beauty it
has a positive connotation but denotes nothing
measurable. ...For quality to be managed, it must
be defined in terms of specific measurable
attributes.
Kritchevsky Simmons, 1991, p. 1817.
11
Quality
  • An indicator of category or rank related to
    features or characteristics of the products
    intended for the same functional use (ISO 8402)

12
Quality
  • Composite of attributes that meet required
    specifications
  • Functionality fitness-for-purpose
  • Meeting customers implied needs, demands and
    expectations
  • Stakeholders/Customers satisfaction
  • Value for money

13
Quality assurance or quality enhancement
  • Enhancement - a process of augmentation or
    improvement
  • In relation to higher education quality
    enhancement refers to
  • the enhancement of individual learners the
    augmentation or improvement of learners
    attributes, knowledge, ability, skills and
    potential.
  • improvement in the quality of an institution or
    programme of study.

14
Enhancement
Where are we now?
How do we get there?
Where we want to be?
15
ENQA European Network for Quality Assurance in
Higher Education
  • Standards and Guidelines for Quality Assurance in
    the European Higher Education Area
  • European standards and guidelines for internal
    quality assurance within higher education
    institutions
  • European standards and guidelines for the
    external quality assurance of higher education
  • European standards and guidelines for external
    quality assurance agencies

16
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17
WFME Intentions
  • to stimulate medical schools to formulate their
    own plans for change and for quality improvement
    in accordance with international recommendations
  • to establish a system of national and/or
    international evaluation and accreditation of
    medical schools to assure minimum quality
    standards for medical school programmes
  • to safeguard practice in medicine and medical
    manpower utilisation, and its increasing
    internationalisation, by well-defined
    international standards of medical education.

18
Basic standards are expressed by a must
  • This means that the standard must be met by every
    medical school and fulfillment demonstrated
    during evaluation of the school.

19
Standards for quality development are expressed
by a should
  • This means that the standard is in accordance
    with international consensus about best practice
    for medical schools and basic medical education.
    Fulfillment of - or initiatives to fulfill - some
    or all of such standards should be documented by
    medical schools. Fulfillment of these standards
    will vary with the stage of development of the
    medical schools, their resources and educational
    policy. Even the most advanced schools might not
    comply with all standards.

20
EDUCATIONAL OUTCOME
  • Basic standard
  • The medical school must define the competencies
    that students should exhibit on graduation in
    relation to their subsequent training and future
    roles in the health system.

21
Quality Spiral
Strategy- Quality focused
Vision and Mission
Objectives strategic and operational
Customers/Stakeholders needs expectations
ACADEMIC, INSTITUTIONAL QUALITY ASSURANCE
PROCESSES
Policy Development
Quality Procedures forvarious functions, e.g..
TLAR
Monitoring, Auditing and Review
TLAR Teaching, Learning, Assessment and
Research
22
Quality Improvements
  • Plan Plan on what you want to do - (Benchmark)
  • Do Implement your plan - e.g. Deliver service
  • Check Check to see that what you put in place is
    working - monitor, audit
  • Act Take corrective action to right things that
    are not right

23
School of MedicineUniversity of Belgrade
  • Curriculum reform
  • Introduction of Quality assurance procedures
  • Tempus Projects
  • Open Society Project

24
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25
Objectives
  • To restructure teaching in Serbian Medical
    Faculties
  • Restructuring of the present curricula
  • Development and implementation of an innovative,
    constructively aligned and fit-for-purpose
    teaching methods best suited to facilitating
    students learning
  • Development and implementation of quality
    assurance and quality control systems

26
Policy priorities (Curriculum)School of
Medicine, University of Belgrade
  • Implementation and further development of the new
    curriculum (started 2004/2005)
  • Innovative teaching methods
  • E-learning classrooms
  • VLE - Project (with Medical University of Graz)
  • Reticulum online e-learning pilot course in
    Histology and Embryology (Moodle)
  • LOMED

27
E-Learning Moodle
28
Policy priorities (QA)School of Medicine,
University of Belgrade
  • Center for quality assurance and teaching and
    learning enhancement (established in March 2005)
  • Commission for evaluation of curriculum
    implementation
  • Commission for control of teaching
  • Commission for knowledge assessment and test
    standardization
  • Commission for validation of courses

29
Quality assurance
  • Validation of courses
  • Training of teaching staff
  • Peer observation scheme
  • Students evaluation of teaching process
    (anonymous questionnaire)
  • Analysis of new curriculum implementation
  • Corrective actions taken

30
Quality enhancement or improvement
  • Focusing on the continuous search for permanent
    improvement, stressing the responsibility of the
    higher education institution to make the best use
    of its institutional autonomy and freedom.
    Achieving quality is central to the academic
    ethos and to the idea that academics themselves
    know best what quality is.
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