GUIDELINES FOR CURRICULUM PLANNING
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Transcript GUIDELINES FOR CURRICULUM PLANNING
GUIDELINES FOR
CURRICULUM
PLANNING
Jose Y. Cueto Jr., MD, MHPEd
Member
Board of Medicine
Overall Plan
•
• CURRICULUM
INSTRUCTION
Curriculum: Basic Elements
• Hilda Taba: “Curriculum Development:
Theory and Practice”
• 1. Objectives
• 2. Content
• 3. Teaching-learning activities
• 4. Evaluation
Planning a Curriculum
•
•
GOAL
•
GENERAL/SPECIFIC OBJECTIVES
•
COMPETENCIES OR ABILITIES
•
CONTENT OR SUBJECT MATTER
Planning a Curriculum
•
TEACHING-LEARNING ACTIVITIES
•
ORGANIZATION OF ROTATIONS
•
EVALUATION OF RESIDENTS
•
RESOURCES
Planning a Curriculum
•
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Instructional Design for Rotations
(Oncology, Infectious diseases, etc)
Objectives
Content
Teaching-learning activities
Resources
Evaluation
Planning a Curriculum
Evaluation
of Program (by accrediting
body)
Evaluation
body)
of Graduates (by certifying
The Goal
Sets
the overall target for the whole
training program
May be worded “To train residents to
assume the following roles….”
The General Objective
What
should be accomplished at the end
of the whole program
Emphasis on the role as clinician, in the
diagnosis and management of diseases
The Specific Objectives
The
objectives at the end of each year of
training
Different domains: Cognitive
•
Psychomotor
•
Affective
The Competencies
The
abilities that should be acquired by the
trainee
The competencies include:
•
Cognitive
•
Psychomotor
•
Affective
•
Interpersonal Skills
•
Communication Skills
The Content
This
specifies all the subject matter that
the trainee needs to learn in the different
domains
Cognitive, Psychomotor, Affective
The Teaching-Learning Activities
The
wide range of learning experiences of
the trainees coupled with the activities
utilized by the trainors to “teach, train,
demonstrate”
Include actual patient management in
different settings, rounds, presentations,
discussions, conferences
Acquisition of Psychomotor
Skills
1.
2.
3.
Fitts and Posner (1976)
Cognitive Phase
Associative Phase
Autonomous or Fixation Phase
Psychomotor Skills
•
Documentation of progression
Assists
Supervised operations
Operations independently performed
Operation
1.Hysterectom
y
2. Cesarian
section
3. Adnexal
surgery
1st
Assist
Supervise Independently
d
performed
Advantage
Credentialing and privileging
Complete documentation
Use for determining hospital privileges to
be granted
Physician will only be allowed to perform
procedures based on what he was able to
do during training
The Organization of Rotations
Sequence
and structure, duration
Covered by the Instructional Design for the
particular rotation
Short periods (1-4 months)
The Evaluation of Residents
The
knowledge, skills and attitudes
acquired by the residents during rotations,
at end of rotations, at the end of the year,
and at the end of the training program
need to be assessed
Utilize different methods
Feedback should be given after the
evaluation
Internal and external
The Resources
Sufficient
number of trainors
Adequate facilities, equipment, and clinical
material
Support services
Evaluation of Program
To
assess the overall quality
Different components
Conducted by appropriate body
Structured system
Evaluation of Graduates
For
certification
Written, oral and practical exams
Feedback to institutions
Instructional Design for Rotation
Detailed
Covers
each rotation
Communicates what should be learned
during the rotation
Summary
The basic elements of a curriculum were
identified
For planning a residency training
curriculum, additional elements were
incorporated
The guidelines can be modified as the
need arises
Ownership of the curriculum should be
developed to ensure its implementation
•
THANK YOU!