The 32nd Annual Meeting of the Association of Directors of Medical Student Education in Psychiatry (ADMSEP) was held June 22nd to June 24th 2006, in Annapolis, Maryland. Approximately 100 registrants from 80 medical schools were in attendance. Plenary sessions, workshops, and posters covered a wide range of educational topics, including issues of professionalism, the challenge of mentoring residents to become teachers, and analyses of psychiatric OSCE cases at various points in the curriculum. Dr. Geoffrey Norman, Canada Research Chair in Cognitive Dimensions of Clinical Expertise at McMaster University, offered the keynote address titled, “Beyond Problem-Based Learning.” In his talk, he argued that the concepts of problem-based learning (PBL) tend to be learned in unsystematic order, which makes it difficult for students to truly learn and understand new material. He suggested that successful transfer of concepts to new problems requires learning from multiple problems. In his talk, he outlined the new curriculum that is being advanced at McMaster (called the COMPASS Curriculum) based on these derived principles of learning and showed how it promised to be superior to “traditional” PBL. More information about the curriculum can be obtained from http://65.39.131.180/ContentPage.aspx?name=COMPASS%20 Home. The 11 abstracts in these proceedings were chosen for their general appeal to medical student educators and because they represent the educational research undertaken by ADMSEP members and colleagues. Included are two task force reports to illustrate the organization's efforts in meeting LCME requirements and a renewed attention to update resources for meeting clinical objectives. The ADMSEP Objectives Taskforce abstract reflects the interspecialty fertilization that underlies ACE. Also included are abstracts from a student study about doctor–patient boundaries and about webbased applications for facilitating administrative responsibilities to a survey of attitudes about who should teach about sexual dysfunction. To appreciate the breadth of topics covered at the meeting, the reader is referred to the full program on the “Meetings” pages of the ADMSEP Web site, http://www.admsep.org.