Breuer G, Lütcke B, St. Pierre M, Hüttl S (2017)
Publication Type: Journal article
Publication year: 2017
Book Volume: 66
Pages Range: 137-150
Journal Issue: 2
DOI: 10.1007/s00101-017-0278-4
The world of medicine is becoming from year to year more complex. This necessitates efficient learning processes, which incorporate the principles of adult education but with unchanged periods of further education. The subject matter must be processed, organized, visualized, networked and comprehended. The learning process should be voluntary and self-driven with the aim of learning the profession and becoming an expert in a specialist field. Learning is an individual process. Despite this, the constantly cited learning styles are nowadays more controversial. An important factor is a healthy mixture of blended learning methods, which also use new technical possibilities. These include a multitude of e‑learning options and simulations, which partly enable situative learning in a "shielded" environment. An exemplary role model of the teacher and feedback for the person in training also remain core and sustainable aspects in medical further education.
APA:
Breuer, G., Lütcke, B., St. Pierre, M., & Hüttl, S. (2017). Learning how to learn for specialist further education. Anaesthesist, 66(2), 137-150. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00101-017-0278-4
MLA:
Breuer, Georg, et al. "Learning how to learn for specialist further education." Anaesthesist 66.2 (2017): 137-150.
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