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El. knyga: Team-Based Learning for Health Professions Education: A Guide to Using Small Groups for Improving Learning

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  • Formatas: 256 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 03-Jul-2023
  • Leidėjas: Stylus Publishing
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781000979541
  • Formatas: 256 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 03-Jul-2023
  • Leidėjas: Stylus Publishing
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781000979541

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"Educators who use this book will transform their classrooms and find renewed satisfaction in their teaching. " Diane M. Billings, Indiana University School of Nursing

Education in the health professions is placing greater emphasis on “active” learning–learning that requires applying knowledge to authentic problems; and that teaches students to engage in the kind of collaboration that is expected in today’s clinical practice.

Team-Based Learning (TBL) is a strategy that accomplishes these goals.

This book is an introduction to TBL for health profession educators. It outlines the theory, structure, and process of TBL, explains how TBL promotes problem solving and critical thinking skills, aligns with the goals of science and health courses, improves knowledge retention and application, and develops students as professional practitioners. The book provides readers with models and guidance on everything they need to know about team formation and maintenance; peer feedback and evaluation processes, and facilitation.

The book includes chapters in which instructors describe how they apply TBL in their courses. The examples range across undergraduate science courses, basic and clinical sciences courses in medical, sports medicine and nursing education, residencies, and graduate nursing programs. The book concludes with a review and critique of the current scholarship on TBL in the health professions, and charts the needs for future research.

Recenzijos

"Educators who use this book will transform their classrooms and find renewed satisfaction in their teaching. Students who participate in Team-Based Learning will develop the requisite knowledge, skills, and abilities of thinking like a professional and face a smoother transition from student to health care provider. The patient is the ultimate beneficiary when the health practitioner has been well prepared to provide safe and effective health care."

From the Foreword by Diane M. Billings, Indiana University School of Nursing

Foreword ix
Diane M. Billings
Preface xi
L. Dee Fink
Dean X. Parmelee
PART ONE: FUNDAMENTALS
Team-Based Learning in Health Professions Education
3(6)
Why Is It a Good Fit?
Dean X. Parmelee
Fundamental Principles and Practices of Team-Based Learning
9(26)
Larry K. Michaelsen
Michael Sweet
Creating Effective Team Assignments
35(26)
Larry K. Michaelsen
Michael Sweet
Improving Critical Thinking Skills in the Medical Professional With Team-Based Learning
61(14)
Herbert F. Janssen
N. P. Skeen
John Bell
William Bradshaw
An Educational Rationale for the Use of Team-Based Learning
75(10)
Didactic Versus Dialectic Teaching
Herbert F. Janssen
N. P. Skeen
R. C. Schutt
Kathryn K. McMahon
Team Formation
85(4)
Kathryn K. McMahon
Team Maintenance
89(10)
John W. Pelley
Kathryn K. McMahon
Facilitator Skills
99(4)
John W. Pelley
Kathryn K. McMahon
Peer Evaluation in Team-Based Learning
103(14)
Ruth E. Levine
Research and Scholarship
117(16)
Team-Based Learning in Health Professions Education
Paul Haidet
Virginia Schneider
Gary M. Onady
PART TWO: VOICES OF EXPERIENCE
Team-Based Learning in the Premedical Curriculum
133(8)
Genetics
Dorothy B. Engle
Team-Based Learning in an Introductory Biochemistry Class
141(10)
A First-Time User's Perspective
Teresa A. Garrett
Using Team-Based Learning as a Substitute for Lectures in a Required Undergraduate Nursing Course
151(10)
Michele C. Clark
Team-Based Learning in a Physician's Assistant Program
161(8)
Bob Philpot
The Use of Reading Assignments and Learning Issues as an Alternative to Anatomy Lectures in a Team-Based Learning Curriculum
169(8)
Nagaswami S. Vasan
David O. DeFouw
Team-Based Learning in Sport and Exercise Psychology
177(18)
Case Studies and Concept Maps as Application Exercises
Karla A. Kubitz
Team-Based Learning in a Psychiatry Clerkship
195(8)
Cheryl S. Al-Mateen
Reinvigorating a Residency Program Through Team-Based Learning
203(12)
The Experience of a Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Program
Michael E. Petty
Kevin M. Means
Contributors 215(10)
Index 225


Larry K. Michaelsen is Professor of Management at Central Missouri State University and is David Ross Boyd Professor Emeritus at the University of Oklahoma, a Carnegie Scholar, a Fulbright Senior Scholar, and former Editor of the Journal of Management Education. He is active in faculty and staff development activities and has conducted workshops on teaching effectively with small groups in a wide variety of university and, corporate settings. Dr. Michaelsen has also received numerous college, university, and national awards for his outstanding teaching and for his pioneering work in two areas. One is the development of Team-Based Learning, a comprehensive small-group based instructional process that is now being used in over 80 academic disciplines and on over 200 campuses in the US and in eight foreign countries. The other is an Integrative Business Experience (IBE) program that links student learning in three core courses to their experience in creating and operating an actual start-up business whose profits are used to fund a hands-on community service project. Dean X. Parmelee is Associate Dean of Academic Affairs at Wright State University's Boonshoft School of Medicine. He has fostered the use and development of Team-Based Learning throughout his school's curriculum, conducted numerous faculty development programs on TBL around the country, and was appointed 2006-07 Chair of the TBL Collaborative. Ruth E. Levine is the Clarence Ross Miller Professor of Clinical Psychiatry and Internal Medicine at the University of Texas Medical Branch, and the Inaugural Director of UTMB's Academy of Master Teachers. As a national consultant for the Team Based-Learning Collaborative, she has assisted numerous faculty in a variety of disciplines develop and establish team-based learning programs. Kathryn K. McMahon is Associate Professor in the Department of Pharmacology and Neuroscience at Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center in Lubbock Texas. She i