April 16, 2007
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Tutorial Format Will Grow with Students
Photo by Graham Ramsay
David Cardozo
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Tutorials are part of the DNA of Harvard medical education. But it
is not unfair, according to David Cardozo, to say that they expect too much
free association from students—self-propelled learning in a system lacking
structure.
“Students would take a paper case of a clinical problem, read
it out loud, and investigate different aspects of it,” said Cardozo,
an HMS assistant professor of neurobiology. “The style of the tutorials
was unchanged, from the very first case students saw in the first year to the
last case they saw in the second year. But the students’ knowledge and
skill set had evolved significantly during that time.” The static tutorials
did not boost the intellectual challenge in recognition of those higher abilities.
The result? Student assessments reported boredom with tutorials. Moreover,
too much was left to student taste in terms of study topics. Recognizing the
problem, instructors tinkered with tutorials in recent years. Students and
tutors both gave the new approaches an enthusiastic thumbs-up, leading to a
group—Cardozo,
Julian Seifter, Thomas Aretz, Michael Parker, and Benjamin White—that
developed the more structured “developmental tutorials,” which
are being vetted with course directors in advance of a hoped-for debut in the
2008–09 academic
year.
The group proposes to replace or augment paper cases with videotapes
of real patients. More importantly, tutorials will be integrated under thematic
canopies. The tutorials for all courses will touch on the same themes, but
grow increasingly challenging as students progress through the first and second
years, in acknowledgment of the students’ advancing skills.
The first
change will be more clearly defined learning goals. Students will get a blueprint
at the start of their first year, explicitly laying out the themes, the steps
to be taken in considering these themes, and the expectations along the way
for student proficiency. One theme will be group dynamics and teamwork. Tutorials
initially will emphasize being comfortable working with and speaking before
a team. Then they will focus on ways to contribute effectively when a student
is solely responsible for a particular aspect of the case. By the end, the
students will learn how to lead a tutorial group.
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The tutorials for all courses will touch on the same themes, but grow increasingly
challenging as students progress through the first and second years.
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Another theme will focus
on researching medical literature. “You have to
learn, first, how to find information in assigned textbook readings,” Cardozo
said. “Then you move up to getting the information from review articles
and conducting literature searches. Ultimately, students will get to the point
of being able to compare information from primary research articles that show
conflicting results.” Yet another theme will be “cross-cultural
care,” in
which students consider how social and economic differences among patients
can lead to disparate disease occurrence, treatment, and compliance with treatment.
First-year tutorials, oriented around basic science, will give way in the
second year to a focus on clinical decision-making. The idea is to build student
confidence to the point that they will be asked to bring in their own cases
for study from their Patient–Doctor coursework, said Cardozo.
All of these changes will require tutors to make multiyear commitments to running
tutorials, another change from the old system.
—Rich Barlow
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Copyright 2007 by the President and Fellows of Harvard
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