Descriptor
Source
Academic Medicine | 11 |
Author
Publication Type
Journal Articles | 11 |
Reports - Research | 11 |
Numerical/Quantitative Data | 1 |
Education Level
Audience
Administrators | 1 |
Practitioners | 1 |
Location
Canada | 11 |
United States | 8 |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating

Barer, Morris L.; And Others – Academic Medicine, 1989
A survey of physicians teaching in British Columbia's one medical school found 20 percent of the province's physicians were involved with the school in some way, most with largely non-academic ("clinical") careers. Full-time faculty worked 20 percent more hours than their clinical counterparts. Two-thirds may have full-time clinical…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Job Analysis, Medical Education

White, David Gordon – Academic Medicine, 1994
A survey of 95 Canadian and U.S. medical schools found that a majority regularly involved community members in research, admission, hospital boards, and undergraduate education. Most had also taken steps to identify community needs. In general, institutions viewed community involvement as beneficial, primarily in building mutual commitment.…
Descriptors: College Administration, Community Involvement, Foreign Countries, Governance

Abrahams, Mark B.; Friedman, Charles P. – Academic Medicine, 1996
A survey of 101 medical schools in the United States and Canada found most had a centralized evaluation system for course and curriculum evaluation, and over half used oversight committees. Beyond the almost universal use of questionnaires, course evaluation practices varied widely, comprising different combinations of evaluation technique and…
Descriptors: Centralization, Course Evaluation, Curriculum Evaluation, Evaluation Methods

Ross, Derrick W.; Melnick, Donald E. – Academic Medicine, 1991
As part of planning for implementation of computer-administered medical board examinations, a telephone survey of 143 accredited medical schools in the United States and Canada found that most have at least 1 computer for every 20 students, though nearly one-third of the schools make very few microcomputers available. Computer types used varied,…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Testing, Equipment Utilization, Facility Inventory, Foreign Countries

Jones, Robert F.; Sanderson, Susan C. – Academic Medicine, 1994
A survey of 142 Canadian and U.S. medical schools found almost all have faculty tenure systems; 9 limit tenure to basic science faculty. Over three-fourths define tenure to include some financial guarantee, which only rarely covers full salary/compensation. Pretenure probationary periods vary. Flexibility was a key policy feature. (Author/MSE)
Descriptors: Administrative Policy, Compensation (Remuneration), Foreign Countries, Higher Education

Baylis, Francoise; Downie, Jocelyn – Academic Medicine, 1991
A survey of all 16 Canadian medical schools found that 15 provided some ethics education. Time allocated ranged from 10-45 hours per degree, with no discernible pattern of distribution across years. Most teaching was case based and issue oriented, most instructors were physicians, and most schools used a pass-fail standard. (Author/MSE)
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Educational Objectives, Ethical Instruction, Ethics

Hill, Rolla B.; Anderson, Robert E. – Academic Medicine, 1991
A survey of Canadian and United States medical schools (n=98) on the uses and value of autopsy revealed that uses extend far beyond traditional ones to legal/judicial proceedings, vital statistics, epidemiological investigations, and public health and aid in understanding such complex matters as medical fallibility, medical uncertainty, and grief.…
Descriptors: Anatomy, Classroom Techniques, Death, Diseases

Faigel, Harris C. – Academic Medicine, 1992
A survey of 103 Canadian and U.S. medical schools found 93 accepted students with learning disabilities whereas 10 did not. Only two-thirds had support programs, and half lacked capacity to diagnose learning disabilities. Twenty-five did not know they could administer licensing examinations in a nonstandard manner. Nineteen had no senior…
Descriptors: Coordination, Educational Diagnosis, Foreign Countries, Handicap Identification

Plaut, S. Michael; And Others – Academic Medicine, 1993
A survey of 75 student affairs deans, 53 individuals responsible for mental health services, and 30 student representatives in 126 Canadian and U.S. medical schools sought information on personnel, individuals served, location, hours, administration, funding, confidentiality, and administrative referrals. Suggestions for improvement focused on…
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Change Strategies, Deans, Foreign Countries

Painter, Sherry D. – Academic Medicine, 1994
A survey of 114 U.S. and Canadian medical schools gathered information about the content, organization, and teaching methods of microanatomy courses. Results suggest the courses are relatively conventional, with development of computer-assisted instruction being impeded by availability of other, less-expensive self-instructional tools.…
Descriptors: Anatomy, Classroom Techniques, Computer Assisted Instruction, Course Content

Faigel, Harris C – Academic Medicine, 1998
A survey of 96 United States and 9 Canadian medical schools found that the large majority accepted students with learning disabilities and claimed to make some academic accommodations. Most would administer nonstandard (i.e., nontimed) licensing examinations, and many reported that their affiliated postgraduate medical-training programs would also…
Descriptors: Academic Accommodations (Disabilities), Accessibility (for Disabled), Administrative Policy, Admission Criteria