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Student
Roles During Group Meetings
As
you work through the case, three special roles will be needed: doctor,
patient and scribe. During the
quarter, each student should serve at least once in each role.
The
scribe
records the group’s discussion on the board.
This role is essential to the group process and also represents a
skill that each student should develop - being able to record and reflect
the group discussion. Generally,
the scribe records ideas in 3 separate categories: data, hypotheses, and
learning issues. Other
information being discussed may also be written.
One student must serve as scribe during each group meeting.
During the quarter, each student should serve as a scribe.
Some groups have also found it helpful to have an additional student
keep a written record of all, which has allowed the scribe more flexibility
in participating.
At case closure, when final learning issues have been delineated, the scribe
of the case should submit the learning issues as directed by the Instructor
of Record.
The patient
(or reader) holds the case materials and answers the doctor’s questions. One student should serve as patient during each group meeting
as necessary and should be selected one meeting PRIOR to the case opening.
When feasible the patient will be provided with pertinent information
about a case at this time. In this way, the student can review material and answer
questions more readily. It is
important that the student serving as patient be reminded that this
information is not to be shared with other students prior to case opening!
The doctor
asks questions of the patient to elicit important information about the
case. One student should serve
as the doctor for each session. Other
students can feed into the doctor with suggestions.
Facilitators will expect a rationale to be given when a lab test is
requested. As with the student
in the role of the patient, the “doctor” should be assigned one session
PRIOR to the opening of the case. Thus,
the doctor will be able to review questions and procedures in eliciting a
patient history.
Assigning the role of physician to one student allows each student to
develop interviewing skills. This
is an opportunity for the student in this role to follow the interviewing
guidelines learned in the clinical science lab.
In addition, the student in this role of physician should summarize
his or her findings about the patient at the end of the session. If a student serves as a physician for the entire case, a
final case summary from the student is also appropriate.
Thus, ALL these roles should be taken seriously; they are all part of
the learning process in medical education.
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