Learning Issues                

Learning issues should be developed at each session.  In the group study process, learning issues provide the focus for study by group members.

Current learning issues are designed to provide a focus for independent study and subsequent discussion; the final learning issues provide an overview of what the group has covered and contribute the major topics to the content exams.  The Current Learning Issues are formulated during each meeting as the case progresses.  Hence, these issues are inherently dynamic, and will change from meeting to meeting based on the data and hypotheses being generated from the case.  The Final Learning Issues represent the summary at case closure.  These are the salient points derived from that particular case and hence do NOT necessarily reflect every Current Learning Issue that had been generated.  A rule of thumb: current learning issues represent the working hypotheses and learning requirements; final learning issues represent the outline or summary of the case.  As part of the “Contract” agreement, learning issues (Current and Final) should truly reflect what is being studied in the group.

All students should study the current Learning Issues generated by their group.  A student may certainly pursue other basic points, but students need to have a common knowledge base when they return to the group meeting. However, there is a difference between saying that all students should study the same learning issues, and saying that all students should study in the same way.  Facilitators find that even when students study the same issues they approach the issues in different ways and bring different resources and information back to the group.  In early cases, it might be desirable for students to refer to common texts by using the list of core texts in the syllabus and specific resources in the group rooms, LRC, and/or library.

Levels of organization

With all learning issues, facilitators and students need to include basic science and clinical science remembering the levels of organization:

Subcellular
Cell
Tissue
Organ/System
Body
Psychosocial
Environment

Usually, the learning issues formulated on the first day of a case are very clinical.  This does not mean basic science issues are being neglected, but it seems to serve as a starting point for the student’s first encounter with the case.  By the second meeting, basic science learning issues are addressed.

 To ensure rapid organization of learning issues, the scribe of the group for a case should submit the final learning issues, as directed by the Instructor of Record.  The group will not be able to start subsequent cases until these final learning issues are turned in.

   

The Case Study

     The case study is a means of integrating basic science, clinical science and social medicine topics.  The exact balance varies according to:

  •                 the topic of the case itself

  •                 the level of the student

  •                 the complexity of the case (i.e., multiple diagnoses)

No single case can cover every aspect of a medical problem.  Remember a case could easily last for an entire quarter.  The reality is that certain topics need to be included in the student’s learning program.

     Paper cases are written to ensure coverage of certain topics depending on the quarter or year.  Therefore the rule of thumb should be to bring a case to closure within a reasonable amount of time (e.g. within 2 weeks for a “one week” case). Most paper cases will be worked through in 3-5 sessions.

EDUCATION RESEARCH COMMUNITY DIVERSITY  HOME
  Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine
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Last updated: 08/17/2007