Reconsidering "good teaching" across the continuum of medical education.

There is no shortage of sustained inquiry into the nature and evaluation of teaching in medical education. For the most part, however, this growing and respectable body of inquiry has uncritically adopted a single model of effective teaching that is assumed to be appropriate across variations in context, learners, and teachers. This article presents five alternative views of "good teaching" and challenges the trend toward any single, dominant view of what constitutes good teaching. Based on 10 years of research, in five different countries, studying hundreds of educators in adult and higher education across a wide range of disciplines, contexts, and cultures, we have evidence of five different perspectives on good teaching: transmission, developmental, apprenticeship, nurturing, and social reform. Each perspective represents a philosophical orientation to knowledge, learning, and the role and responsibility of being an educator. A "snapshot" of each perspective is provided, including an example from continuing medical education (CME), a set of key beliefs, primary responsibilities, typical strategies, and common difficulties. Readers are encouraged to use the five perspectives as a means of identifying, articulating, and revisiting assumptions and beliefs they hold regarding their view of effective teaching. They are also encouraged to resist a "one-size-fits-all" approach to the investigation, improvement, or evaluation of teaching in CME.

[1]  A. Rothman,et al.  Evaluating clinical teachers for promotion , 1989, Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges.

[2]  D. Schaad,et al.  Characteristics of effective clinical teachers of ambulatory care medicine , 1991, Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges.

[3]  D. Kember A reconceptualisation of the research into university academics' conceptions of teaching , 1997 .

[4]  A case-study approach. Fellows' perceptions of a teaching course. , 1994, Archives of pediatrics & adolescent medicine.

[5]  R. Hilliard The good and effective teacher as perceived by pediatric residents and by faculty. , 1990, A M A Journal of Diseases of Children.

[6]  T. Margerison,et al.  Teaching the teachers , 2017, Climacteric : the journal of the International Menopause Society.

[7]  David Minton A Case Study Approach , 1991 .

[8]  H. A. Loughran,et al.  Improving clinical teaching. , 1954, Nursing outlook.

[9]  L. S. Vygotskiĭ,et al.  Mind in society : the development of higher psychological processes , 1978 .

[10]  Gordon H. Guyatt,et al.  Users' Guides to the Medical Literature: I. How to Get Started , 1993 .

[11]  T. Sork,et al.  AERC 2000: An International Conference. Proceedings of the Annual Adult Education Research Conference (41st, Vancouver, Canada, June 2-4, 2000). , 2000 .

[12]  A D Oxman,et al.  No magic bullets: a systematic review of 102 trials of interventions to improve professional practice. , 1995, CMAJ : Canadian Medical Association journal = journal de l'Association medicale canadienne.

[13]  K. Skeff,et al.  Improving Clinical Teaching: Evaluation of a National Dissemination Program , 1992 .

[14]  Daniel Pratt,et al.  Five Perspectives on Teaching in Adult and Higher Education , 1998 .

[15]  D M Irby,et al.  What clinical teachers in medicine need to know , 1994, Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges.

[16]  H. Schmidt,et al.  What makes a tutor effective? A structural‐equations modeling approach to learning in problem‐based curricula , 1995, Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges.

[17]  Daniel D. Pratt,et al.  Conceptions of Teaching , 1992 .

[18]  Dennis Fox,et al.  Personal theories of teaching , 1983 .

[19]  W. Norton Grubb,et al.  Honored but Invisible : An Inside Look at Teaching in Community Colleges , 2001 .

[20]  G H Guyatt,et al.  Users' guides to the medical literature. I. How to get started. The Evidence-Based Medicine Working Group. , 1993, JAMA.