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SEPTEMBER / OCTOBER
2005
HARVARD MACY
Caribbean medical school to host program modeled
on Harvard Macy Institute
The St. Matthew’s University School of Medicine in Grand Cayman will
be the site of the latest professional development program modeled after
the programs of the Harvard Macy Institute. The Program for Educators in
the Health Sciences, which will be held December 10-15, has been designed
to address the specific challenges facing faculty teaching in the Caribbean
region. Elizabeth G. Armstrong, PhD, director of education programs for
HMI, and Karen V. Mann, PhD, professor and director of the Division of Medical
Education at Dalhousie University (Canada), will co-direct the course.
A select group of 40 health care educators will participate in a variety of
exercises aimed at developing the knowledge base and skills to enhance their
expertise as classroom educators. Despite years of experience in health science
education, many faculty in the region have never received formal training in
adult education methodologies. The university’s leadership see this program
as an important step in the professional development of its faculty and academic
programs, and an opportunity to stimulate education reform throughout the region.
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| Gordon Green: Macy Institute alumnus says program
will help lead to “great strides in the development of innovative
programs and teaching methodologies and further our credibility in
the international medical education. |
“ We all share the goal of advancing our educational programs and
competing on the same playing field as programs in the United States, Canada,
and the United Kingdom,” said Gordon J. Green, MD, executive dean
and chief academic officer of SMU. “A Caribbean-based HMI program
will help us to make great strides in the development of innovative programs
and teaching methodologies and further our credibility in the international
medical education arena.”
Green, a Harvard Macy program alumnus and faculty member, added that like the
programs on which the course is modeled, the six-day program will include a
range of learning formats, including large-group presentations, interactive
exercises, practice teaching exercises with videotaping, observations, reflective
use of journals, and individual and small group consultations. Prior to program,
each participant will design an educational project of benefit to their institution
which they will develop more fully during the program. The participant’s
project will be the element that connects them to program concepts and themes.
According to Armstrong, the course will address four key educational objectives:
help participants improve their teaching skills, introduce them to techniques
for measuring education outcomes, develop strategies for project development,
and help the faculty develop new perspectives on working in and with teams. “The
course format is designed to help further each participant’s institutional
project by providing a laboratory environment where individuals with common
interests can contribute to each other’s efforts,” she said. “As
with each of our programs, the broad objective is to help a group of individuals
to inspire institutional change.”
The demand for its programs has led the Harvard Macy Institute to design customized
courses for academic leaders and medical educators in the United Kingdom, Canada,
Singapore, and Australia.
The deadline to apply to be part of this program is Friday, September 30. Notification
of successful application will be sent in late October 2005. For more information,
visit the program website.
Copyright 2006 Harvard Medical International
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