Specialists in emergency medicine offer advice to their colleagues and other physicians who are planning to teach emergency medicine. They cover background, teaching in the emergency department and beyond, teaching specific groups, improving as an educator in emergency medicine, and teaching techniques and strategies. This second has new chapters on lecturing to an international audience using simulation as a teaching tool, and how to make journal club work. All the chapters were reviewed and revised and updated if necessary. Annotation ©2013 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)
Emergency medicine attendings who wish to hone their teaching skills can find a number of books on educational strategies written by physicians from other disciplines. However, until the publication of the first edition of this book, they did not have access to a text written by emergency medicine physicians on methods of teaching that are directly applicable to teaching EM. This book was compiled to meet that need.
Following the introductory section, which provides important background information, the books contents are organized into 4 sections that correspond to the core needs and interests of EM educators: Section 2 focuses on practical and ethical considerations of teaching in the ED; Section 3 provides strategies for teaching specific groups of learners; Section 4 looks at the skills that are characteristic of the best EM educators; and Section 5 looks indepthly at specific teaching techniques and strategies.
Now more than ever this book addresses the needs of physician educators from all over the world. New chapters discuss lecturing to an international audience; using simulation as a teaching tool; how to make journal club work for you, and other topics that are of broad interest to medical educators in this field. In general, each chapter has been updated and reviewed to make sure the content was something that emergency physician educators could use in any country .
The chapter contributors are widely regarded as leaders in the field of emergency medicine education and faculty development. Authors were given free rein to develop their chapters and write in their own style. They were asked to present their personal views on how to successfully teach the art of emergency medicine, rather than review evidence-based guidelines regarding medical education. As a result, most of the chapters have few references. This first-person approach to a multi-authored textbook yields a compilation that varies in style from chapter to chapter and exposes the reader to a variety of communication techniques.
Editors and Contributors |
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Preface |
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xxi | |
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Section 1 Background/Introduction |
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Chapter 1 Adult learners in the emergency department |
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3 | (12) |
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Chapter 2 Obstacles to teaching in the emergency department |
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15 | (10) |
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Chapter 3 Teaching and patient care in emergency medicine |
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25 | (10) |
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Chapter 4 Mentoring in emergency medicine |
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35 | (24) |
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Section 2 Teaching in the Emergency Department and Beyond |
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Chapter 5 Bedside teaching in the emergency department |
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59 | (13) |
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Chapter 6 Teaching invasive medical procedures |
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72 | (13) |
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Chapter 7 Providing feedback in the emergency department |
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85 | (13) |
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Chapter 8 The computer as a teaching tool |
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98 | (20) |
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Chapter 9 Educational technology: Web 2.0 |
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118 | (19) |
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Chapter 10 Teaching the intangibles: professionalism and interpersonal skills/communication |
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137 | (14) |
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Chapter 11 Teaching lifelong learning skills: journal club and beyond |
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151 | (12) |
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Chapter 12 Medical podcasting 101 |
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163 | (14) |
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Chapter 13 Use of simulation in emergency department education |
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177 | (12) |
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Section 3 Teaching Specific Groups |
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Chapter 14 Teaching medical students |
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189 | (14) |
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Chapter 15 Teaching residents from other services in the emergency department |
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203 | (13) |
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Chapter 16 The education of resident physicians in emergency medicine |
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216 | (21) |
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Chapter 17 Teaching residents how to teach |
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237 | (11) |
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Chapter 18 Teaching to an international audience |
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248 | (20) |
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Chapter 19 The emergency department consultation: teaching physician-physician communication to improve patient outcomes |
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268 | (17) |
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Section 4 Improving as an Educator in Emergency Medicine |
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Chapter 20 Characteristics of great teachers |
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285 | (10) |
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Chapter 21 Effective presentation skills |
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295 | (12) |
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Chapter 22 Small-group discussion skills |
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307 | (12) |
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Chapter 23 Faculty development as a guide to becoming a better teacher |
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319 | (20) |
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Section 5 Teaching Techniques and Strategies |
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Chapter 24 Strategies for effective clinical emergency department teaching |
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339 | (13) |
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Chapter 25 Pearls and pitfalls in teaching: what works, what does not? |
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352 | (9) |
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Index |
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361 | |
Chief Editor
Chief Editor
Robert L. Rogers, FACEP, FAAEM, FACP; Associate Professor of Emergency Medicine and Medicine; Director, Undergraduate Medical Education; Director, Teaching Fellowship; Department of Emergency Medicine, The University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Associate Editors
Amal Mattu, MD, FAAEM, FACEP, Professor and Vice Chair; Director, Faculty Development Fellowship; Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Michael E. Winters, MD, FACEP, FAAEM, Associate Professor of Emergency Medicine and Medicine; Director, Combined EM/IM Program; Co-Director, Combined EM/IM/Critical Care Program; Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Joseph P. Martinez, MD, Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine; Assistant Dean for Student Affairs, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Terrence M. Mulligan DO, MPH, FACOEP, FNVSHA, FACEP, FAAEM, FIFEM, Assistant Professor in Emergency Medicine; University of Maryland School of Medicine, Department of Emergency Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA; Extraordinary Senior Lecturer / Visiting Assistant Professor, Stellenbosch University, Division of Emergency Medicine, Cape Town, South Africa.