Must Reads
What is a ‘Must Read’ for those interested in medical education?
Each month, we identify 3-4 noteworthy articles from the health professions education literature and label them as “must reads.” Selection is based on several criteria including originality and methodological rigor. Our process includes a formal search of the peer-reviewed literature, screening titles and abstracts, full text review, and an editorial meeting to achieve consensus.
Who are we and why are we doing this?
Our reviewers include individuals with expertise in teaching, educational oversight, and research as well as those who are beginning their careers as educational scholars.
The volume of health professions education articles has become overwhelming. In curating some of the best new published papers, we hope to make it easier for all of us to keep abreast of cutting edge educational scholarship and practices.
We’d welcome involvement in the selection process. Reviewers can earn CME credit and contribute to Must Reads research. If you are interested in supporting this work or have perspectives to share, please email Sean Tackett: stacket1@jhmi.edu.
You can also follow @MedEdMustReads on X (aka Twitter) to be notified when new must read articles are selected and sign up to receive an email each month.
(Current Reviewers: Kara Alcegueire, Paul Bain, Kavita Chapla, Scott Kinkade, Pranav Kotamraju, Viviane Liao, Erica Lin, Liju Mathew, Pallavi Menon, Amin Nakhostin-Ansari, Ashley Paul, Julianne Perretta, Katherine Senko, Julia Shalen, Sean Tackett, Scott Wright)
Featured This Month
The Gist
• Suggestions for improvement mattered more than who was providing feedback or in what setting.
Why This is a Must Read
Feedback is essential for learning. This study’s innovative methodology identified the broad importance of providing constructive ideas for improvement and aspects of feedback where individual preferences may need to be accommodated.
The Gist
• Performance on USMLE exams, clinical reasoning assessments, and ratings of milestones were similar.
Why This is a Must Read
Medical education is long and expensive. This study provides evidence that an accelerated pathway can achieve similar educational outcomes as traditional programs, potentially at lower cost.
The Gist
• Described 3 interconnecting aspects: (1) individuals noticing learning opportunities, (2) social support for individual development, and (3) influence of healthcare system cultures and divisions of labor.
Why This is a Must Read
Everyone in healthcare can learn from each other. This article highlights that interprofessional learning is happening already and could improve with greater awareness and concerted efforts to cross professional boundaries.
Featured
The Gist
• Spaced repetition led to better retention after 18 months and performance on new items at 30 months.
Why This is a Must Read
The Gist
• Participants found a target article published by a biased source to be less credible after applying lateral reading.
Why This is a Must Read
The Gist
• Leaders struggled to balance the interests of learners, teachers, and the program when presented with highly critical comments.
Why This is a Must Read
The Gist
• Described 3 themes: (1) equality is not necessary for effective partnership, (2) partnership means feeling valued, and (3) value can be shown multiple ways.
WHY THIS IS A MUST READ
The Gist
• Smaller groups, more time, and teacher motivation (not teacher experience) were correlated with ratings of quality by students.
WHY THIS IS A MUST READ
The GIst
• Contrasts “clock time” – linear and measured objectively - with “event time” – flexible and subjective – and considers implications for medical education.