Journal Article10.1080/01421590120036547
AMEE Guide No. 21: Curriculum mapping: a tool for transparent and authentic teaching and learning.
TL;DR: Faced with curricula which are becoming more centralized and less departmentally based, and with curriculas including both core and optional elements, the teacher may find that the curriculum map is the glue which holds the curriculum together.
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Abstract: The curriculum is a sophisticated blend of educational strategies, course content, learning outcomes, educational experiences, assessment, the educational environment and the individual students' learning style, personal timetable and programme of work. Curriculum mapping can help both staff and students by displaying these key elements of the curriculum, and the relationships between them. Students can identify what, when, where and how they can learn. Staff can be clear about their role in the big picture. The scope and sequence of student learning is made explicit, links with assessment are clarified and curriculum planning becomes more effective and efficient. In this way the curriculum is more transparent to all the stakeholders including the teachers, the students, the curriculum developer, the manager, the public and the researcher. The windows through which the curriculum map can be explored may include: (1) the expected learning outcomes; (2) curriculum content or areas of expertise covered; (3) student assessment; (4) learning opportunities; (5) learning location; (6) learning resources; (7) timetable; (8) staff; (9) curriculum management; (10) students. Nine steps are described in the development of a curriculum map and practical suggestions are made as to how curriculum maps can be introduced in practice to the benefit of all concerned. The key to a really effective integrated curriculum is to get teachers to exchange information about what is being taught and to coordinate this so that it reflects the overall goals of the school. This can be achieved through curriculum mapping, which has become an essential tool for the implementation and development of a curriculum. Faced with curricula which are becoming more centralized and less departmentally based, and with curricula including both core and optional elements, the teacher may find that the curriculum map is the glue which holds the curriculum together.
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Citations
Education on prescribing for older patients in the Netherlands: a curriculum mapping
Carolina J. P. W. Keijsers,Carolina J. P. W. Keijsers,Johanna E. de Wit,Jelle Tichelaar,Jacobus Brouwers,Dick J. de Wildt,P. G. M. de Vries,Paul A. F. Jansen +7 more
TL;DR: There are large differences in the quantity and quality of (geriatric) pharmacology and pharmacotherapy education in Dutch medical schools, and more time should be devoted to skills and attitude, and the assessment procedures should be optimized with high priority.
Using an information literacy curriculum map as a means of communication and accountability for stakeholders in higher education
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the creation and implementation of an information literacy curriculum map (ILCM) in addressing the needs of stakeholders at colleges and universities, which has facilitated and increased communication among teaching faculty, administrators, and academic librarians at Berkeley College.
Development of a competency mapping tool for undergraduate professional degree programmes, using mechanical engineering as a case study
TL;DR: A new mapping software tool that streamlines and standardises the competency mapping process and enables quantification of learning within a professional degree programme, and provides a mechanism for holistic programme improvement.
Monitoring and analysis of the change process in curriculum mapping compared to the National Competency-based Learning Objective Catalogue for Undergraduate Medical Education (NKLM) at four medical faculties. Part I: Conducive resources and structures.
Maria Lammerding-Koeppel,Marianne Giesler,Maryna Gornostayeva,Elisabeth Narciss,Annette Wosnik,Stephan Zipfel,Jan Griewatz,Olaf Fritze +7 more
TL;DR: This two-part article analyses and summarises how NKLM curriculum mapping could be successful in spite of resistance at the faculties and describes key factors relevant for motivating faculties and teachers during the mapping process.
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Curriculum Mapping—An Essential Tool for Curriculum Development
TL;DR: Dehn et al. as mentioned in this paper proposed curriculum mapping, which is a spatial representation of the different components of the curriculum so that the whole picture and the relationships and connections between their parts are easily seen.
References
Educational strategies in curriculum development: the SPICES model
TL;DR: Six education strategies have been identified relating to the curriculum in a medical school and each issue can be represented as a spectrum or continuum: student‐centred/teacher‐Centred, problem‐based/information‐gathering, integrated/discipline‐based, community-based/hospital‐based and systematic/apprenticeship‐based.
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AMEE Guide No. 14: Outcome-based education: Part 1-An introduction to outcome-based education
TL;DR: Outcome-based education offers many advantages as a way of reforming and managing medical education, and can provide a clear and unambiguous framework for curriculum planning which has an intuitive appeal.
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The integration ladder: a tool for curriculum planning and evaluation.
TL;DR: Eleven points on a continuum between the two extremes of integration in medical education are described.
Ten questions to ask when planning a course or curriculum.
TL;DR: This brief practical aid to course or curriculum development cannot replace educational qualifications or experience, but it does examine ten basic questions, any of which may be all too easily neglected.
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Evolution or revolution and the future of medical education: replacing the oak tree.
TL;DR: The oak tree and the evolution or revolution and the future of medical education: replacing the oak tree are discussed.
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