Abstract

BackgroundAchieving changing needs, advancing knowledge, and innovations in higher education require the constant changes of medical school curricula and successfully applying the new reforms requires some modifications in the medical educators’ core beliefs. The purpose of this study was to describe the medical educators’ beliefs about the alignment of the learning goals with teaching and assessment processes in the context of the curriculum changes.MethodA qualitative method was used to study the medical educators’ beliefs through selecting the faculty participants via a purposeful sampling strategy. The study was conducted at a Medical School in Iran. For the individual interviews, we invited both the professors of the basic sciences and the clinical professors who had thought medical students for at least 5 years. Ten educators were interviewed.ResultThe results of the research showed that, in the professors’ viewpoints, the development of competencies in the students has been abandoned and this is due to the priority of treatment to education in the clinical courses and the limited learning experiences. Moreover, the gap between the content and the context and the attendance of the students in the hospitals instead of the clinics to pass their internship courses has reduced the provision of authentic learning experiences. These conditions have affected the quality of education negatively. The non-systematic assessment has also worsened the situation.ConclusionDespite the changes in the curriculum, the compartmentalization of the curriculum and the structure of the medical education have caused the professors’ beliefs to be in line with the past perspectives. Some modifications in the structure of the curriculum seem to be necessary.

Highlights

  • Achieving changing needs, advancing knowledge, and innovations in higher education require the constant changes of medical school curricula and successfully applying the new reforms requires some modifications in the medical educators’ core beliefs

  • Competencies are the outcomes of learning, and learning experiences should be designed in a way that engages students in learning activities which lead to acquiring the intended outcomes

  • Two groups of professors including the professors of basic sciences and the clinical professors, who had instructed the medical students for at least 5 years, were invited

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Summary

Introduction

Achieving changing needs, advancing knowledge, and innovations in higher education require the constant changes of medical school curricula and successfully applying the new reforms requires some modifications in the medical educators’ core beliefs. Curricula were often subject- or discipline-based [5], but, nowadays, they often focus on the problems or tasks that make an appeal on competencies that must be developed This curriculum change has significant implications for teaching and assessment, which requires teachers to be engaged in more complex practices [6]. Constructive alignment is a way curriculum developers and instructors can apply to create internal consistency between curriculum and instruction components It is a form of outcomes-based teaching and learning in which both teaching and assessment are in line with the intended learning outcomes [7, 9]

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