Publications by authors named "Frank T. Stritter"

Purpose: We evaluate the impacts of the Academic Scholars and Leaders (ASL) Program in achieving 3 key objectives: treatment of education as a scholarly pursuit, improved education leadership, and career advancement.

Materials And Methods: We report on the twenty-year experience of the ASL Program-a national, longitudinal faculty development program of the Association of Professors of Obstetrics and Gynecology (APGO) covering instruction, curriculum development/program evaluation, assessment/feedback, leadership/professional development, and educational scholarship. We conducted a cross-sectional, online survey of ASL participants who graduated in 1999-2017.

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Background: Since 2010, the Joint Council on Thoracic Surgery Education, Inc (JCTSE) has sponsored an annual "Educate the Educators" (EtE) course. The goal is to provide United States academic cardiothoracic surgeons (CTS) the fundamentals of teaching skills, educational curriculum development, and using education for academic advancement. This report describes the course development and evaluation along with attendee's self-assessment of skills through the first 5 years of the program.

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Objective: The guided outcomes in learned efficiency (GOLE) model emphasizes the use of evidence-based resources to understand the diagnosis, treatment, follow-up, and prevention of disease. We seek to determine whether presentations created using the GOLE model are superior to an unstructured approach in achieving Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) Core Competencies.

Study Design: Consenting medical students were randomized to GOLE or control groups to individually research a self-selected clinical topic.

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Purpose - The purpose of this study was to investigate influences on third-year medical students' specialty preferences.Method - A survey questionnaire was mailed to third-year medical students at two medical schools. The questionnaire asked students to rate the degree to which various aspects of the third-year curriculum and perceived specialty characteristics influenced their specialty preferences.

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The influence of a role model is a frequently cited factor in choosing a specialty choice among medical students, particularly primary care oriented students. While many studies have looked at role modeling from students' perspectives, very few have considered role modeling characteristics from the perspective of the role models. This study, using the principles of Bandura's social learning theory, determined and illuminated the characteristics and teaching methods associated with positive role modeling in clinical education from the perspective of the role model.

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