21,187 research outputs found

    Social Media in the Dental School Environment, Part A: Benefits, Challenges, and Recommendations for Use

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    Social media consist of powerful tools that impact not only communication but relationships among people, thus posing an inherent challenge to the traditional standards of who we are as dental educators and what we can expect of each other. This article examines how the world of social media has changed dental education. Its goal is to outline the complex issues that social media use presents for academic dental institutions and to examine these issues from personal, professional, and legal perspectives. After providing an update on social media, the article considers the advantages and risks associated with the use of social media at the interpersonal, professional, and institutional levels. Policies and legal issues of which academic dental institutions need to be aware from a compliance perspective are examined, along with considerations and resources needed to develop effective social media policies. The challenge facing dental educators is how to capitalize on the benefits that social media offer, while minimizing risks and complying with the various forms of legal constraint

    Advances in Teaching & Learning Day Abstracts 2005

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    Proceedings of the Advances in Teaching & Learning Day Regional Conference held at The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston in 2005

    Pull and Push: Strengthening Demand for Innovation in Education

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    Examines policy, information, and cultural barriers that minimize the "demand pull" for educational innovation. Calls for encouraging early adopters, bolstering smart adoption, providing better information, and rewarding productivity improvements

    Faculty Perceptions of Teaching Clinical Reasoning at the Patient Bedside

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    Nurse educators meet frequently in conference settings and peer groups seeking an answer to “How do you do clinical?”. The purpose of this qualitative, phenomenological study was to explore faculty perceptions of clinical teaching experiences at the patient bedside at a level one or two associate’s degree nursing program by faculty within the Virginia Community College System (VCCS) that teach a rural student population. Rural students struggle with work-life barriers that complicate their educational journey. This was compounded by the COVID-19 pandemic that presented new challenges to the way nursing education could be delivered creating a need for on line and blended learning environments. Many programs experienced a shutdown of clinical teaching facilities and were forced online. This new learning environment proved to be another educational challenge for rural healthcare communities. This study explored faculty perceptions with interview sessions addressing clinical teaching practice over the last five years at the patient bedside with eight nurse educators from VCCS rural community colleges. A literature review revealed gaps in the research; the utilization of a comprehensive clinical teaching model and an overall disagreement on any one “best” teaching method. Three research questions on the teaching of clinical reasoning, safe patient care outcomes, and the experiences of new teaching environments during the COVID -19 pandemic were developed. Following hermeneutic analysis, the primary themes of Collaborative Teaching Practices, Traditional Teaching Methods, and Pandemic Teaching emerged with secondary themes of Concept Based Curriculum and Blended Learning Environments. Academic nursing leaders and faculty should use this information to create a common clinical teaching model. Health care leaders should use this information to enhance bedside teaching practices to produce safe outcomes for patients in their care. Nursing educators should use this information to make strong clinical thinkers that will address the growing need for nurses in the United States in the wake of the most significant nursing shortage experienced in this profession. This hermeneutic phenomenology is the beginning of a much-needed change in clinical education. Nurse educators must develop critical reasoning skills in nurses that will care for an aging population using innovative methods for critical thought

    ALT-C 2010 - Conference Introduction and Abstracts

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    Transforming pre-service teacher curriculum: observation through a TPACK lens

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    This paper will discuss an international online collaborative learning experience through the lens of the Technological Pedagogical Content Knowledge (TPACK) framework. The teacher knowledge required to effectively provide transformative learning experiences for 21st century learners in a digital world is complex, situated and changing. The discussion looks beyond the opportunity for knowledge development of content, pedagogy and technology as components of TPACK towards the interaction between those three components. Implications for practice are also discussed. In today’s technology infused classrooms it is within the realms of teacher educators, practising teaching and pre-service teachers explore and address effective practices using technology to enhance learning
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