(1) Some didactic implications concerning the significance of the chance set-up and reliance on analogies are discussed.
(2) Although 100 per cent claim that gastrointestinal endoscopy is provided by their program, only 76 per cent have formal endoscopy training, usually centered around the PGY 3 level, with only 23 per cent having didactic lectures in endoscopy.
(3) Graduate courses of medical pedagogy and special didactics at S. Paulo University Medical School are analysed.
(4) The first three months of the program are devoted to didactic training and the remaining six months to acquiring practical experience.
(5) If the steady flow of books which began with Economic Problems Of The Church (1955) can, to some extent, be seen as a succession of more scholarly explorations of the themes sketched out in the early didactic essays, they also reflect the extraordinary sweep of Hill's interests and mind.
(6) The use of the workshop as a didactical method in the presentation of clinical practica to community health nursing students at the distance teaching University of South Africa is described.
(7) Group 1 was given general objectives and information regarding availability of recommended resources, including self-learning materials for the elective, didactic seminars, and viewbox exposure.
(8) Interestingly, this study found that the students' self-assessed changes between post-didactic training and post-clinical training were significant in only one area--their ability to manage the medical emergencies of elderly patients, including a patient's death in the dental chair.
(9) The quality of the training to a great extent depends on the didactic skill, willingness to teach and a not inconsiderable expense of time for the chief physician, the assistant chief physician and the physician in charge of the wards during visits and when working in the ward.
(10) Many general surgeons have incorporated laparoscopic cholecystectomy into their clinical practices, usually after completing a postgraduate didactic and laboratory animal training course.
(11) The didactic value is underlined by color photographs taken of diseased skin and nails with the dermatoscope at various magnifications.
(12) This, also, is a didactic music workshop with a difference - part of an umbrella programme called Discovery, established 20 years ago by the LSO as the orchestra's outreach wing, with a mission not unlike that of Venezuela's Sistema, but streamlined over two decades for application to home ground.
(13) The 30-day hospital training program described includes both didactic material and on-the-job experience.
(14) Many programs (40%) have less than ten hours of didactic training in pediatrics and 41% offer ten hours or less of clinical experience.
(15) Training consisted of didactic presentations on the pathophysiology of alcohol withdrawal syndrome and information on use of the Clinical Institute Withdrawal Assessment for Alcohol (CIWA-A).
(16) This set of objectives may be used to guide a one-month radiology rotation or serve as part of a teaching program integrated with didactic training and emergency department experience.
(17) Didactic purposes and proof of plausibility may require more data than just the final results.
(18) Didactic teaching methods were exchanged for a more creative approach without alteration of the course structure.
(19) To introduce the residents to the principles of surgical techniques in a simulated environment outside the operating room, the program consisted of a combination of two didactic sessions and six "wet labs" taking 3 to 4 hours per week for 8 weeks between January and March each year.
(20) The sessions vary in structure from didactic lecture to group work.
Pedagogy
Definition:
(n.) Pedagogics; pedagogism.
Example Sentences:
(1) The ophthalmologist must explain to the child and the parents that dyslexia usually has no ophthalmological or visual cause but is a disability with a neurobiological background, still unknown, in which the only efficient treatment is within the area of pedagogy.
(2) Explain Everything is my number one recommendation,” says Mark Anderson, assistant head teacher and director of digital pedagogy at Sir Bernard Lovell school.
(3) Graduate courses of medical pedagogy and special didactics at S. Paulo University Medical School are analysed.
(4) Such activities are carried out with professional staff belonging to different fields in pedagogy.
(5) Although he was a significant educational reformer during the progressive era, a founder of various journals in psychology and pedagogy, a profile writer, and the individual who brought Freud and Jung to the United States, G. Stanley Hall's ideas on the education of nonwhites were, for his period, quite conventional.
(6) Child psychiatry is pre-eminently the branch of medicine which, as a consequence of the complexity of its tasks, has to depend to a great extent on psychology, on pedagogy and to no lesser degree, on the cooperation of parents and the whole of society; on the other hand, pedagogy should increasingly rely and draw on the latest achievements of child psychiatry.
(7) Social pedagogy is commonly practised in education and social care in many countries in continental Europe, but there is no real tradition of the approach in the UK.
(8) As appropriate use of the activity sheets requires familiarity with active pedagogy, training seminars are given to educators prior to the introduction of the Ctc programmes in the field.
(9) There are so many ways to teach Indigenous culture | #IndigenousX Read more I see teachers always struggling with what to do when wanting to incorporate Aboriginal pedagogies like Tyson Yunkaporta’s eight-ways approach, Chris Sarra’s Strong and Smart with what else the profession is asking of them, such as Alarm, quality teaching, visual literacy, direct instruction, and phonemic awareness.
(10) More subliminal than the work [I do] for Charlie , though very much in the spirit of Charlie .” He explains: “I don’t think art and literature are the same as pedagogy, to deliver overt political messages.
(11) A first goal of educational gerontology should be to develop programs going beyond those developed for children and realized in traditional institutions of pedagogy.
(12) Pedagogy takes into account the parents as well as the child in order to assist them and help them accept the situation.
(13) In dealing with the teaching of the doctor-patient relationship, the authors look into a relational-psychological perspective which is supported by notions and instruments intrinsic to medical pedagogy.
(14) Operative treatment along with conductive pedagogy and other methods of physiotherapy help these patients to be able to take care of themselves and to become useful members of society.
(15) Pedagogy is not only concerned with the impairment of intelligence, but seeks a global approach in which the affective relationship is taken into account.
(16) The development of a scientific pedagogy of learning disabilities as called for by Kirk and Bateman (1962) requires the rendering of a science of learning disabilities and a pedagogy derived from that science.
(17) Recent trends of pedagogy point out the importance of self-learning, which represents one of the applied models of mastery learning.
(18) Inescapably, though, there is this idea underpinning the toy industry, as well as strains of modern pedagogy, that male and female children are fundamentally different, that their interests stem from and reveal a difference in their brains and that to object to this is the endpoint of politically correct foolishness, arguing about evidence that's in front of your own eyes.
(19) The implications for further research and application are discussed, giving special attention to teacher effects, the needs of remedial mathematics instruction, and the claims of mastery-learning pedagogies.
(20) Other critics accuse Moocs of peddling outdated pedagogy; of playing a cruel trick on the masses because, even if courses are openly accessible, credentials will be as tightly controlled as ever; and even of being a new tool of western imperialism.