| III.
Teaching Skills Examples |
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| Associate
Professor (Clinical Track) |
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| I
am involved in teaching at many levels. I help teach first-year
medical students a screening musculoskeletal examination.
This is a 2-hour workshop given to half of the class one day
and half of the class another day during which they practice
musculoskeletal exam skills on each other. I also give a one-hour
lecture on low back pain to first year students. |
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| I
participate in a clinician-mentor course every year for second-year
medical students. Students practice taking histories
and perform physical examinations on volunteer patients, present
the patients, write up their patients and identify, research
and present a 1-3 page learning objective about their patient.
I hear all the presentations, review the write-ups, observe
their examinations and facilitate the learning objectives.
Once during the learning period, the student will have their
history and physical examination videotaped which we review
and critique together. The total time involved is approximately
50 hours per year. I give three 30-minute lectures every year
to second year medical students on osteoarthritis, fibromyalgia
and vasculitis. I also lead two 90-minute small group sessions
with second year medical students. During these sessions,
we review musculoskeletal vocabulary, how to distinguish inflammatory
versus noninflammatory arthropathies, patterns of joint involvement
as a clue to diagnosis, polymyalgia rheumatica and giant cell
arteritis. |
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| From
1996 through 2000, I taught approximately 15-20 third-year
medical students a year in a mentoring environment
in the rheumatology outpatient clinic. The student sees my
patients, presents the patients to me, picks a patient to
write up and identifies a learning issue to review that pertains
to their patient. |
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| I
teach approximately 8-10 fourth-year medical students
in a mentoring environment in the clinic. The circumstances
are similar to those described above for the third year students
but involve higher expectations for efficiency, knowledge
base and self-study. These students take part in the integrated
rheumatology curriculum for those rotating through rheumatology
as described above. During their rotation, I also give 6-7
one-hour didactic lectures a month on lupus, osteoarthritis,
laboratory tests in rheumatology, infectious arthritis, arthrocentesis
and low back pain . |
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| I
teach approximately 20-30 Internal Medicine and Orthopedic
residents in a mentoring environment in the clinic
as described above for the fourth year medical students. I
give 3 one-hour didactic lectures on low back pain, infectious
arthritis and crystalline arthritis as part of the Internal
Medicine Core Curriculum. I provided a workshop on arthrocentesis
to the residents annually as part of the core curriculum.
I attend internal medicine morning report once a week to guide
general internal medicine discussions as well as provide rheumatologic
expertise to the discussions if appropriate. |
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| I
am also involved in continuing medical education (CME)
for physicians in practice and other health-care
professionals. I gave a one-hour Grand Rounds for the Internal
Medicine Department in 1997 on polymyalgia rheumatica and
giant cell arteritis. I gave a one-hour lecture on enteropathic
arthritis to the Crohn’s Colitis Society in 1996. I
gave a one-hour lecture on joint injections to a family practice
CME meeting in 1996. I gave a one-hour lecture on the approach
to a patient with a positive ANA to the Iowa Physician Assistants
Society annual CME meeting in 1997. I gave a one-hour lecture
followed by a 3-hour workshop on joint injections for the
Iowa Physician Assistants Society annual CME meeting in 1998,
1999 and 2000. I helped teach a 3-day workshop on the examination
of the musculoskeletal system at the National American College
of Physicians meeting in 1999 and 2000. I gave 4 one-hour
lectures on nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs to various
Iowa Medical Societies in 1999. I gave a one-hour lecture
followed by a 3-hour workshop on joint injections for the
American Academy of Family Physicians State Meeting in 2000.
I gave one-hour lectures on chronic pain management to the
Linn County Pharmacy Society and at the Arthritis Foundation
(Iowa Chapter) Arthritis Frontiers meeting in 2000. I gave
a one-hour lecture on new therapies in rheumatoid arthritis
at the University of Iowa’s Update in Internal Medicine
meeting in 2000. |
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| My
cumulative average evaluation score for lectures, conferences
and workshops (1999 – 2000) is 4.34 on a 5 point schedule.
The cumulative average evaluation score for lectures, conferences
and workshops given by others at the same time as mine is
3.53. My cumulative average evaluation score by students,
residents and fellows (2000) is 4.83 on a 5 point scale. I
do not have comparative data for other teaching physicians
in the Department of Internal Medicine. My cumulative average
Peer evaluation score (2000) is 4.77 on a 5 point scale. I
do not have comparative data for other teaching physicians
in the Department of Internal Medicine. |
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| Professor
(Tenure Track) |
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My teaching history at the University of Iowa is as follows
(not including 2 or fewer guest lectures): |
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| Undergraduate
Teaching |
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| 1. |
Immunology
section of General Microbiology (20% of course): 1990-91,
1991-92, |
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1992-93,
1993-94. Student number ranged from 73-110. |
| 2. |
Laboratory
research for credit (Honors or Problems in Microbiology) to
8 Microbiology |
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majors
from 1991 to the present. |
| 3. |
Four
students for summer research projects from either the Howard
Hughes or NSF |
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summer
programs (1990, 1995, 1996, 1997). |
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| Graduate
Teaching |
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| 1. |
Advanced
Immunology/Immunology I: 1991-92 (40% of course and Course
Director), |
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1993-94
(40% of course and Course Director), 1994-95 (25% of course
and Course |
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Director),
1995-96 (25% of course), 1996-97 (25% of course), 1997-98
(30% of |
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course
and Course Director). Student number ranged from 12 to 25;
students from |
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10
different Depts./Programs are currently enrolled in the course. |
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| 2. |
Advanced
Topics in Immunology: 1989-90 (25% of course), 1996-97 (33%
of course |
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and
Course Director). Student number ranged from 10 to 11. |
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| 3. |
Graduate
Student research rotations: In addition to the 7 graduate
students who |
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have
completed or are working towards graduate degrees in my lab,
I have |
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supervised
research rotations for 4 graduate students in Microbiology,
3 in the |
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Molecular
Biology Program, and 4 in the Immunology Program. |
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| Medical
Student Teaching |
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| 1. |
MS1
small group case analysis based on Immunology lecture material:
1995-96 (6 |
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hours
of discussion plus writing one of the sample cases), 1996-97
(6 hours of |
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discussion
plus writing one of the sample cases). 14 students. |
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| 2. |
Summer
research rotations: one MS1 (1994) and one MSTP (1995) student. |
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| The
following evaluative documents of my teaching are included
in the Appendix: |
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| 1. |
Student
course evaluations from General Microbiology. |
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| 2. |
Course/instructor
student evaluations from Advanced Immunology/Immunology I. |
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| 3. |
Peer
evaluations of teaching for Immunology I. |
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| 4. |
Student
evaluations for my section of Advanced Topics in Immunology. |
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