Abstract

This review presents information on changes in the accreditation standards of medical schools in Korea by the Korean Institute of Medical Education and Evaluation (KIMEE) from 2000 to 2019. Specifically, the following aspects are explained: the development process, setting principles and directions, evaluation items, characteristics of the standards, and validity testing over the course of 4 cycles. The first cycle of accreditation (2000–2005) focused on ensuring the minimum requirements for the educational environment. The evaluation criteria emphasized the core elements of medical education, including facilities and human resources. The second cycle of accreditation (2007–2010) emphasized universities’ commitment to social accountability and the pursuit of excellence in medical education. It raised the importance of qualitative standards for judging the content and quality of education. In the post-second accreditation cycle (2012–2018) which means third accreditation cycle, accreditation criteria were developed to standardize the educational environment and programs and to be used for curriculum development in order to continually improve the quality of basic medical education. Most recently, the ASK 2019 (Accreditation Standards of KIMEE 2019) accreditation cycle focused on qualitative evaluations in accordance with the World Federation of Medical Education’s accreditation criteria to reach the international level of basic medical education, which emphasizes the need for a student-centered curriculum, communication with society, and evaluation through a comprehensive basic medical education course. The KIMEE has developed a basic medical education evaluation and accreditation system in a step-by-step manner, as outlined above. Understanding previous processes will be helpful for the future development of accreditation criteria for medical schools in Korea.

Highlights

  • Editor: Sun Huh, Hallym University, KoreaReceived: January 4, 2020; Accepted: January 21, 2020Published: April 7, 2020This article is available from: http://jeehp.org

  • The Korean Institute of Medical Education and Evaluation (KIMEE) was certified by the Ministry of Education of the Korean Government as an official accreditor for basic medical education in 2014 in response to ongoing requests by medical educators [11]

  • A national, large-scale objective strucwww.jeehp.org tured clinical examination (OSCE) was introduced as part of the licensing examination to improve practical clinical education in the last 2 years of the medical curriculum in 2010. This was enabled by the accreditation standards that prescribed the installation of skill labs and OSCEs at medical schools [12]

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Summary

Introduction

With the goal of supporting continuous improvements in the educational environment and programs. The accreditation standards have changed over the past 20 years 2019) across the first cycle (2000–2005), the second cycle (2007–2011), the post-second cycle (2012–2018), and the Accreditation Standards of KIMEE 2019 (ASK 2019) cycle. A report was issued on the changes in accreditation standards and development directions of the KIMEE (Supplement 1), which is summarized in this review article

Objectives
Evaluation items
5-3. Development plan
6-1. Graduate education
Continuous improvement
Conclusion
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