The Fellows Project: Education Skills for Health Profession Students

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Caramori,Ugo
Data de Publicação: 2020
Outros Autores: Mello,Júlia Brum de, Barretto,Camila Azeredo Pereira, Costa,Rafael de Madureira Ribas, Peña,Stela Souza, Ramos,Ana Luisa Carneiro, Almeida,Fernando Antonio de, Pavan,Maria Valéria
Tipo de documento: Relatório
Idioma: eng
Título da fonte: Revista Brasileira de Educação Médica (Online)
Texto Completo: http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0100-55022020000100403
Resumo: Abstract: New information technologies have produced profound changes in education and society. All knowledge areas have been constantly reinvented, readjusted and recreated to fit the changing demands of professional practice. Education in the health professions has also followed this trend. It is now clear how students, the future educators, are involved in this transformation and have been vectors of these changes. In parallel, the new curricula for health professions courses presuppose the active participation of students in their own training and in the training of their peers. This new way of teaching, which privileges teamwork, peer learning, interdisciplinarity, and autonomy, stimulates and demands this leadership role from students. Active student participation in undergraduate educational activities has several benefits: it favors learning; interpersonal relationships; acquiring skills in communication, mentoring, leadership, research, and management and develops social accountability. Undergraduate students in the health professions, even at the earliest stages of their education, make their choices and direct their interest to the area of knowledge they desire in professional life. When this choice falls on a specific area of health, they find, at the undergraduate level, ways to begin to develop their knowledge and skills in clinical practice, surgery, pediatrics, laboratory research, public health and other areas, but find no support for training when they intend to be future teachers. In this context, the FELLOWS Project emerged, proposed and carried out by medical students, a blended learning teaching development project that aims to train and improve education skills for students of the health professions, herein presented as an experience report. In 2017 the project took place from April to October, in monthly nighttime meetings, and eventually on Saturdays. It was conducted by four medical students (coordinators), two supervising local teachers and had collaborators from other medical education institutions. In 2018 the educational activities were held exclusively by students/resident coordinators and supervising teachers through two immersion sessions (Friday, Saturday and Sunday), separated by a 4 month-period, during which an education project was prepared, created in groups of six students accompanied by a tutor and a coordinator. The activities of the FELLOWS Project follow the National Curriculum Guidelines for the Undergraduate Medical Course of 2001 and 2014, meet the demands of health education in Brazil and respect the desired profile of the professional graduate, with social accountability. It offers contact with and progressive skills of communication and competencies for teaching, using active teaching-learning methodologies, teamwork, the use of digital technologies, exercising oral and written communication and creativity for innovation. The FELLOWS Project implementation process has brought direct benefits to the organizers and participants and indirect benefits to the educational institutions to which they belong, as it involved knowledge production, student engagement and social accountability.
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spelling The Fellows Project: Education Skills for Health Profession StudentsHealth EducationMedical EducationStudentsHigher EducationTeachingAbstract: New information technologies have produced profound changes in education and society. All knowledge areas have been constantly reinvented, readjusted and recreated to fit the changing demands of professional practice. Education in the health professions has also followed this trend. It is now clear how students, the future educators, are involved in this transformation and have been vectors of these changes. In parallel, the new curricula for health professions courses presuppose the active participation of students in their own training and in the training of their peers. This new way of teaching, which privileges teamwork, peer learning, interdisciplinarity, and autonomy, stimulates and demands this leadership role from students. Active student participation in undergraduate educational activities has several benefits: it favors learning; interpersonal relationships; acquiring skills in communication, mentoring, leadership, research, and management and develops social accountability. Undergraduate students in the health professions, even at the earliest stages of their education, make their choices and direct their interest to the area of knowledge they desire in professional life. When this choice falls on a specific area of health, they find, at the undergraduate level, ways to begin to develop their knowledge and skills in clinical practice, surgery, pediatrics, laboratory research, public health and other areas, but find no support for training when they intend to be future teachers. In this context, the FELLOWS Project emerged, proposed and carried out by medical students, a blended learning teaching development project that aims to train and improve education skills for students of the health professions, herein presented as an experience report. In 2017 the project took place from April to October, in monthly nighttime meetings, and eventually on Saturdays. It was conducted by four medical students (coordinators), two supervising local teachers and had collaborators from other medical education institutions. In 2018 the educational activities were held exclusively by students/resident coordinators and supervising teachers through two immersion sessions (Friday, Saturday and Sunday), separated by a 4 month-period, during which an education project was prepared, created in groups of six students accompanied by a tutor and a coordinator. The activities of the FELLOWS Project follow the National Curriculum Guidelines for the Undergraduate Medical Course of 2001 and 2014, meet the demands of health education in Brazil and respect the desired profile of the professional graduate, with social accountability. It offers contact with and progressive skills of communication and competencies for teaching, using active teaching-learning methodologies, teamwork, the use of digital technologies, exercising oral and written communication and creativity for innovation. The FELLOWS Project implementation process has brought direct benefits to the organizers and participants and indirect benefits to the educational institutions to which they belong, as it involved knowledge production, student engagement and social accountability.Associação Brasileira de Educação Médica2020-01-01info:eu-repo/semantics/reportinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersiontext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0100-55022020000100403Revista Brasileira de Educação Médica v.44 n.1 2020reponame:Revista Brasileira de Educação Médica (Online)instname:Associação Brasileira de Educação Médica (ABEM)instacron:ABEM10.1590/1981-5271v44.1-20190233.inginfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessCaramori,UgoMello,Júlia Brum deBarretto,Camila Azeredo PereiraCosta,Rafael de Madureira RibasPeña,Stela SouzaRamos,Ana Luisa CarneiroAlmeida,Fernando Antonio dePavan,Maria Valériaeng2020-03-25T00:00:00Zoai:scielo:S0100-55022020000100403Revistahttp://www.educacaomedica.org.br/https://old.scielo.br/oai/scielo-oai.phprevista@abem-educmed.org.br||revista@educacaomedica.org.br1981-52710100-5502opendoar:2020-03-25T00:00Revista Brasileira de Educação Médica (Online) - Associação Brasileira de Educação Médica (ABEM)false
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv The Fellows Project: Education Skills for Health Profession Students
title The Fellows Project: Education Skills for Health Profession Students
spellingShingle The Fellows Project: Education Skills for Health Profession Students
Caramori,Ugo
Health Education
Medical Education
Students
Higher Education
Teaching
title_short The Fellows Project: Education Skills for Health Profession Students
title_full The Fellows Project: Education Skills for Health Profession Students
title_fullStr The Fellows Project: Education Skills for Health Profession Students
title_full_unstemmed The Fellows Project: Education Skills for Health Profession Students
title_sort The Fellows Project: Education Skills for Health Profession Students
author Caramori,Ugo
author_facet Caramori,Ugo
Mello,Júlia Brum de
Barretto,Camila Azeredo Pereira
Costa,Rafael de Madureira Ribas
Peña,Stela Souza
Ramos,Ana Luisa Carneiro
Almeida,Fernando Antonio de
Pavan,Maria Valéria
author_role author
author2 Mello,Júlia Brum de
Barretto,Camila Azeredo Pereira
Costa,Rafael de Madureira Ribas
Peña,Stela Souza
Ramos,Ana Luisa Carneiro
Almeida,Fernando Antonio de
Pavan,Maria Valéria
author2_role author
author
author
author
author
author
author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Caramori,Ugo
Mello,Júlia Brum de
Barretto,Camila Azeredo Pereira
Costa,Rafael de Madureira Ribas
Peña,Stela Souza
Ramos,Ana Luisa Carneiro
Almeida,Fernando Antonio de
Pavan,Maria Valéria
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Health Education
Medical Education
Students
Higher Education
Teaching
topic Health Education
Medical Education
Students
Higher Education
Teaching
description Abstract: New information technologies have produced profound changes in education and society. All knowledge areas have been constantly reinvented, readjusted and recreated to fit the changing demands of professional practice. Education in the health professions has also followed this trend. It is now clear how students, the future educators, are involved in this transformation and have been vectors of these changes. In parallel, the new curricula for health professions courses presuppose the active participation of students in their own training and in the training of their peers. This new way of teaching, which privileges teamwork, peer learning, interdisciplinarity, and autonomy, stimulates and demands this leadership role from students. Active student participation in undergraduate educational activities has several benefits: it favors learning; interpersonal relationships; acquiring skills in communication, mentoring, leadership, research, and management and develops social accountability. Undergraduate students in the health professions, even at the earliest stages of their education, make their choices and direct their interest to the area of knowledge they desire in professional life. When this choice falls on a specific area of health, they find, at the undergraduate level, ways to begin to develop their knowledge and skills in clinical practice, surgery, pediatrics, laboratory research, public health and other areas, but find no support for training when they intend to be future teachers. In this context, the FELLOWS Project emerged, proposed and carried out by medical students, a blended learning teaching development project that aims to train and improve education skills for students of the health professions, herein presented as an experience report. In 2017 the project took place from April to October, in monthly nighttime meetings, and eventually on Saturdays. It was conducted by four medical students (coordinators), two supervising local teachers and had collaborators from other medical education institutions. In 2018 the educational activities were held exclusively by students/resident coordinators and supervising teachers through two immersion sessions (Friday, Saturday and Sunday), separated by a 4 month-period, during which an education project was prepared, created in groups of six students accompanied by a tutor and a coordinator. The activities of the FELLOWS Project follow the National Curriculum Guidelines for the Undergraduate Medical Course of 2001 and 2014, meet the demands of health education in Brazil and respect the desired profile of the professional graduate, with social accountability. It offers contact with and progressive skills of communication and competencies for teaching, using active teaching-learning methodologies, teamwork, the use of digital technologies, exercising oral and written communication and creativity for innovation. The FELLOWS Project implementation process has brought direct benefits to the organizers and participants and indirect benefits to the educational institutions to which they belong, as it involved knowledge production, student engagement and social accountability.
publishDate 2020
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dc.relation.none.fl_str_mv 10.1590/1981-5271v44.1-20190233.ing
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dc.publisher.none.fl_str_mv Associação Brasileira de Educação Médica
publisher.none.fl_str_mv Associação Brasileira de Educação Médica
dc.source.none.fl_str_mv Revista Brasileira de Educação Médica v.44 n.1 2020
reponame:Revista Brasileira de Educação Médica (Online)
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