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http://bmj.com/cgi/content/full/324/7330/125
BMJ 2002;324:125-126 ( 19 January )
Editorials
Learning in practice: a new section in the BMJ
A place where educationalists and
clinicians can exchange ideas
See Learning in practice pp 153,
156,
Editorial p 126
William Butler Yeats said that education
should be "not the filling of a pail but the lighting of a fire." But
how far does this aspiration tally with our own experience of
medical education? We all remember good teachers who inspired and
motivated us; delivered useful content in an assimilable manner;
harnessed our emotional as well as cognitive energies as learners.
Unfortunately, most of us also remember too many bad teachers and
poor educational experiences
dull
lectures, irrelevant content, assessment of rote learning in
preference to comprehension, and presentation driven more by the
convenience of teachers than our learning needs. The kind of
dispiriting experience which erodes motivation, and turns us into
"have to" rather than "want to" learners.
This week the BMJ launches a new section called "Learning in
Practice." We like the word learning because its focuses on the outcome,
which really matters to patients
clinicians
who know what they need to know to practise good medicine. Learning
and education
the
process by which we hope to achieve it
are
everyone's business in medicine today. Yet learning remains one of
the most unexamined parts of clinical practice. All doctors are
teachers and learners throughout their careers, and lifelong
learning is something we aspire to. Yet most of us know little about
how to do it well.
Beacons of excellence in medical education exist, but much of the landscape
is murky. The common picture is of ad hoc policies and initiatives,
poorly informed by evidence. In the darkest corners things have
moved little beyond the rhetoric of "see one, do one, teach
one." Meanwhile, a cycle of educational abuse continues to play
its part in doctors' underperforming or even leaving the profession.
If clinicians are relatively uninformed about best educational practice it
is not because no evidence exists. True, much educational research
is conducted using methods unfamiliar to doctors. Its quality is
mixed, with a greater focus on observational research and inductive
reasoning and fewer experimental data than is the case with clinical
research. Much of it is published in medical education journals,
which clinicians tend not to read. So the evidence that exists seems
inaccessible and easy to dismiss. Yet this is unacceptable where the
alternative is evidence free medical education at the public
expense. Allowing educational knowledge, expertise, and inspiration
to accumulate, unused and undervalued, in ivory towers marked
"medical education department," while clinicians battle on
in ignorance, is profligacy with resources no healthcare system can
afford. 
What can a general medical journal do? Clearly not provide all the answers, or
even a significant proportion of the content needed to address this
gap between educational evidence and practice. What we can do is
encourage a wider debate. In our new section we hope to publish
original research and review articles which highlight good teaching
and learning practices of use to a wide range of clinicians. If we
cannot fill the gap, we might draw attention to it. Learning in
Practice will appear each month and will be the place where
educationalists and clinicians can exchange ideas aimed at
delivering better educated doctors capable of better patient care.
Tomorrow's doctors need more than ever to be lifelong learners. Rather than
mere pails full of educational content they must be adept at
accessing "just in time" knowledge, driven by professionalism, responsible
for their own learning, and enthusiastic to learn how to manage
patients better. Please send us articles that might help point in
this direction.
Sandra Goldbeck-Wood, assistant editor.
BMJsgoldbeck-wood@bmj.com
Ed Peile, research training fellow in medical
education.
University of Oxford Medical School, Oxford
OX7 3LF ed.peile@dphpc.ox.ac.uk
© BMJ 2002
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Collections
under which this article appears:
Teaching
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Rapid Response responses to
this article:
Read all Rapid Response
responses
Behind William Butler Yeats statement.
Sergio Stagnaro
bmj.com, 18 Jan 2002 [Response]
Related editorials in BMJ:
Researching the outcomes of educational
interventions: a matter of design.
David Prideaux
BMJ 2002 324: 126-127. [Full text]
Other related articles in BMJ:
EDITOR'S CHOICE
Health systems: where doctors and patients meet.
BMJ 2002 324: 0. [Full text]
LEARNING IN PRACTICE
Problem based learning in continuing medical education: a review of
controlled evaluation studies.
P B A Smits, J H A M Verbeek, and C
D de Buisonjé
BMJ 2002 324: 153-156. [Full text] [extra: Details of criteria used]
LEARNING IN PRACTICE
Learning needs assessment: assessing the need.
Janet Grant
BMJ 2002 324: 156-159. [Full text]
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