Title: Medical Education Status Report
1Medical Education Status Report
Stanford School of Medicine Leadership
Retreat January 30 - February 1, 2003
2Major Accomplishments 2002
- Developed a highly productive working
relationship between the Faculty Senate and the
Deans office - Made important headway in establishing a new
curriculum for September 2003 with agreed
objectives to - Better integrate basic and clinical sciences
(translational curriculum) - Develop and foster student scholarship and
community activism - Created a committee on evaluation and advising
with major objectives - To review and improve evaluation process
- To ensure faculty and student engagement in the
evaluation and advising process - Developed new advising program for students.
3Objectives for 2003
- Curriculum
- Institute first year of the new curriculum
- Institute scholarly concentrations
- Develop mechanisms to facilitate and foster
teaching - Improve existing education support
- Fund raising for teaching
- Changing the culture of medical education
- Develop CME program
- Financial solvency
- Proactive service to the Stanford community and
beyond
4Proposed curricular structure
Undergraduate
Year
Residency and beyond
5Salient features of new curriculum
- New courses
- Fundamentals of molecular sciences (first year)
- Advances in applied biomedical sciences (second
year with grad students) - Eliminated biochemistry and molecular biology
- Decreased classroom time
- Utilize new technologies (anatomy, nutrition)
- Better sequencing
- Allied clinical sciences with basic sciences
- Longer school year
- Clinical clerkships start earlier
6Salient features of new curriculum
- Required basic science curriculum to be added to
previous clinical years. Some strategies - Required courses
- Clinical research, health care financing
- Applied genomics
- Selective courses
- Embedded science within clerkships
- Enhanced orientations
- Basic science attendings/basic science clerkship
- Required student assignments
7Principles of scholarly concentrations
- Medical school major required of all students
- Two options
- Original research option (will likely require 5
years curriculum) - Curriculum within a discipline
- Existing courses
- Newly developed course
- Attendance at seminar/journal club
- Conduct of of significant scholarly work (funded
for equivalent of 2 years half time) - Investigative option (can be done within 4 year
curriculum) - Curriculum as above
- Original term paper
8Logistics of scholarly concentration
- Timing
- Students should try to select by third quarter of
first year - Requirements can be completed throughout the
students tenure at Stanford - Funding
- Medical scholars will fund students (in Original
Research option) and administration - Deans office will fund faculty leadership
- Embedded flexibility
- Students can develop independent scholarly
concentration - Administration
- Scholarly concentration ad hoc subcommittee to
faculty senate - Committee intersections with Med Scholars
committee and Office of Medical Education
9RFP for scholarly concentrations
- Title of program
- Designated director
- General program description and rationale
- List of mentors and number of student research
slots available - Curriculum components
- Description of integration with graduate programs
- Description of interdisciplinary or
bench-to-bedside nature of proposal - Method of evaluation
- Degree offered for research option (if any)
10Scholarly concentration deadlines
- January 15, 2003 - Release/Distribution
of RFP - February 7, 2003 - Letters of Intent
Deadline - February 21, 2003 - Consolidation of SCs
- April 1, 2003 - Proposals Deadline
- April 15-18, 2003 - Meetings with
Committee - April 30, 2003 - Notification of Results
of Competition - October 1, 2003 - Initiation of Scholarly
Concentrations.
11Curriculum Name?
12Facilitate and foster teaching
- Improve current support
- Develop endowment
- Change culture of education
13Facilitating and fostering teachingCommittee on
teaching facilitation
- Improve current support for teaching.
- Operating budget changes to directly fund
teaching and scholarly concentration
directorships - Develop AP process so that teaching has a more
recognizable role in promotion - Promote pedagogical tools
- SUMMIT
- Standardized patients
- Pedagogical course
- Center for Teaching and Learning
14Facilitating and fostering teachingFund raising
for education
In an effort to improve medical teaching in an
era when research is king and technology and
societal changes are dramatically revising what
it means to be a doctor, Harvard Medical School
is launching an organization to recognize and
support its best teachers and to innovate in
medical education. Harvard Gazette
15Facilitating and fostering teachingFund raising
for education
- SMILE building
- Development of endowment for
- Dedicated teaching salaries
- Building educational technologies
- Student research support
- Financial aid
16Facilitate and fostering teachingChanging the
school culture
- Emphasize rigor
- Improve evaluation of students and faculty
- Concentrate major teaching roles in a few hands
- Need to cover non-research topics
- Need to have name associated with course material
- Broaden other teaching roles
- Famous names giving lectures in topics of
interest - Expanding teaching by basic science and clinical
post-docs - Taking seriously voluntary Clinical Educator role
- Use of basic science attendings
- Decrease medical student teaching
- Achieve consensus on educational uses of
technology
17CME Mission
- To providing medical education programs that are
responsive to the needs of physicians and that
offer opportunities for ongoing intellectual
stimulation and professional renewal.
18CME
- Has the potential to
- Provide significant added value to our faculty at
Stanford - Serve as a link to the community
- Serve as a marketing tool for the hospital
- CME program lacks
- Visibility
- Vigor
- Money
19CME goals for 2003
- Identify new director
- Establish a faculty advisory board
- Work with departments, divisions and hospitals to
identify educational objectives - Integrate with information technologies to
provide online and other IT based program - Establish better reimbursement strategy for
ongoing activities
20Summary
- Much progress over the last year a lot ahead.
- Education of students and faculty as galvanizing
force for school - Need department support to make this a successful
endeavor. - Expect evolution (punctuated equilibrium) not
everything will work exactly right from day one.
21Leadership in education
- Oscar Salvatierra
- Theodore Sectish
- Neil Gesundheit
- Bert Glader
- Parvati Dev
- Gary Schoolnik
- Betsy Moreno
- Committee members