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Teaching leadership: the medical student society model
Author(s) -
Matthews Jacob H,
Morley Gabriella L,
Crossley Eleanor,
Bhanderi Shivam
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
the clinical teacher
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.354
H-Index - 26
eISSN - 1743-498X
pISSN - 1743-4971
DOI - 10.1111/tct.12649
Subject(s) - curriculum , context (archaeology) , medical education , quality (philosophy) , subject (documents) , health care , leadership development , psychology , public relations , medicine , political science , pedagogy , computer science , paleontology , philosophy , epistemology , library science , law , biology
Summary Background All health care professionals in the UK are expected to have the medical leadership and management ( MLM ) skills necessary for improving patient care, as stipulated by the UK General Medical Council ( GMC ). Context Newly graduated doctors reported insufficient knowledge about leadership and quality improvement skills, despite all UK medical schools reporting that MLM is taught within their curriculum. Innovation A medical student society organised a series of extracurricular educational events focusing on leadership topics. The society recognised that the events needed to be useful and interesting to attract audiences. Therefore, clinical leaders in exciting fields were invited to talk about their experiences and case studies of personal leadership challenges. The emphasis on personal stories, from respected leaders, was a deliberate strategy to attract students and enhance learning. Evaluation data were collected from the audiences to improve the quality of the events and to support a business case for an intercalated degree in MLM . Implications When leadership and management concepts are taught through personal stories, students find it interesting and are prepared to give up their leisure time to engage with the subject. Students appear to recognise the importance of MLM knowledge to their future careers, and are able to organise their own, and their peers’, learning and development. Organising these events and collecting feedback can provide students with opportunities to practise leadership, management and quality improvement skills. These extracurricular events, delivered through a student society, allow for subjects to be discussed in more depth and can complement an already crowded undergraduate curriculum. Newly graduated doctors reported insufficient knowledge about leadership and quality improvement skills