Response to: Teaching sociology to undergraduate medical students
Response to: Teaching sociology to undergraduate medical students
Understanding the social basis of health and medicine and the contexts of clinical care are essential components of good medical practice. This includes the ways in which social factors such as class, ethnicity and gender influence health outcomes and how people experience health, illness and health care.
In our Guide we describe what sociology is and what it brings to medicine, beginning with the nature of the “sociological imagination”. Sociological theory and methods are reviewed in order to explain and illustrate the role of sociology in the context of undergraduate medical education. Reference is made to the 2016 report ‘A Core Curriculum for Sociology in UK Undergraduate Medical Education’ by Collett and colleagues. Teaching and student learning are discussed in terms of organisation and delivery, with an emphasis on practice. Sections are included on assessment, feedback to students, evaluating teaching, faculty development, challenges for teaching sociology, and the value of a “community of practice” for sociology teachers in medical education.
teaching and learning, medical sociology
Kendall, Kathleen
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Collett, Tracey
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de Iong, Anya
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Forrest, Simon
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Kelly, Moira
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2 October 2020
Kendall, Kathleen
7c1c7abc-513b-4da5-b99d-268cd1d8bc58
Collett, Tracey
3c966cf8-3f19-448a-ad48-3c545020aa78
de Iong, Anya
449a5faf-d363-4477-8715-071c326389cc
Forrest, Simon
d777a9b6-dd79-4d26-9055-5d385d19531b
Kelly, Moira
6af3a41d-dbcc-4d11-83be-0035493a3791
Kendall, Kathleen, Collett, Tracey, de Iong, Anya, Forrest, Simon and Kelly, Moira
(2020)
Response to: Teaching sociology to undergraduate medical students
,
vol. 42,
10 ed.
Dundee.
AMEE, 1pp.
Abstract
Understanding the social basis of health and medicine and the contexts of clinical care are essential components of good medical practice. This includes the ways in which social factors such as class, ethnicity and gender influence health outcomes and how people experience health, illness and health care.
In our Guide we describe what sociology is and what it brings to medicine, beginning with the nature of the “sociological imagination”. Sociological theory and methods are reviewed in order to explain and illustrate the role of sociology in the context of undergraduate medical education. Reference is made to the 2016 report ‘A Core Curriculum for Sociology in UK Undergraduate Medical Education’ by Collett and colleagues. Teaching and student learning are discussed in terms of organisation and delivery, with an emphasis on practice. Sections are included on assessment, feedback to students, evaluating teaching, faculty development, challenges for teaching sociology, and the value of a “community of practice” for sociology teachers in medical education.
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Published date: 2 October 2020
Keywords:
teaching and learning, medical sociology
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Local EPrints ID: 443135
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/443135
PURE UUID: 734e1462-b78a-4f68-bcb8-cbc794740b8c
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Date deposited: 11 Aug 2020 16:34
Last modified: 10 May 2024 16:59
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Contributors
Author:
Tracey Collett
Author:
Anya de Iong
Author:
Simon Forrest
Author:
Moira Kelly
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