Publication | Open Access
Twelve tips for medical curriculum design from a cognitive load theory perspective
91
Citations
17
References
2016
Year
Medical Curriculum DesignTask AnalysisEducationCognitionSocial SciencesInstructional DesignSurgery SimulatorCognitive AnalysisTwelve TipsCognitive Load TheoryCognitive ScienceTask PerformanceAutonomous Task PerformanceRehabilitationMedical StudentsCurriculumCognitive ErgonomicsCognitive EngineeringCognitive System EngineeringDesign ThinkingCognitive Load
During their course, medical students have to become proficient in a variety of competencies. For each of these competencies, educational design can use cognitive load theory to consider three dimensions: task fidelity: from literature (lowest) through simulated patients (medium) to real patients (highest); task complexity: the number of information elements in a learning task; and instructional support: from worked examples (highest) through completion tasks (medium) to autonomous task performance (lowest). One should integrate any competency into a medical curriculum such that training in that competency facilitates the students' journey that starts from high instructional support on low-complexity low-fidelity learning tasks all the way to high-complexity tasks in high-fidelity environments carried out autonomously. This article presents twelve tips on using cognitive load theory or, more specifically, a set of four tips for each of task fidelity, task complexity, and instructional support, to achieve that aim.
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