The Question of Competence: Reconsidering Medical Education in the Twenty-First Century

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Brian D. Hodges, Lorelei Lingard
Cornell University Press, Oct 11, 2012 - Medical - 240 pages

Medical competence is a hot topic surrounded by much controversy about how to define competency, how to teach it, and how to measure it. While some debate the pros and cons of competence-based medical education and others explain how to achieve various competencies, the authors of the seven chapters in The Question of Competence offer something very different. They critique the very notion of competence itself and attend to how it has shaped what we pay attention to—and what we ignore—in the education and assessment of medical trainees.

Two leading figures in the field of medical education, Brian D. Hodges and Lorelei Lingard, drew together colleagues from the United States, Canada, and the Netherlands to explore competency from different perspectives, in order to spark thoughtful discussion and debate on the subject. The critical analyses included in the book’s chapters cover the role of emotion, the implications of teamwork, interprofessional frameworks, the construction of expertise, new directions for assessment, models of self-regulation, and the concept of mindful practice. The authors juxtapose the idea of competence with other highly valued ideas in medical education such as emotion, cognition and teamwork, drawing new insights about their intersections and implications for one another.

 

Contents

Introduction
1
1 The Shifting Discourses of Competence
14
2 Rethinking Competence in the Context of Teamwork
42
3 Perturbations The Central Role of Emotional Competence in Medical Training
70
4 Competence as Expertise Exploring Constructions of Knowledge in Expert Practice
97
5 Assessing Competence Extending the Approaches to Reliability
113
6 Blinded by Insight SelfAssessment and Its Role in Performance Improvement
131
7 The Competent Mind Beyond Cognition
155
References
177
Contributors
205
Index
209
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About the author (2012)

Brian D. Hodges is Vice-President Education at the University Health Network, Professor of Psychiatry, Scientist at the Wilson Centre for Research in Education, and Richard and Elizabeth Currie Chair in Health Professions Education Research at the University of Toronto. He is the author of The Objective Structured Clinical Examination. Lorelei Lingard is Professor in the Department of Medicine and Faculty of Education and Director of the Centre for Education Research & Innovation, Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry, Western University. She is coeditor of The Rhetoric and Ideology of Genre. M. Brownell Anderson is Senior Academic Officer, International Programs, National Board of Medical Examiners.

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