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Back to the future? Active learning of medical...
Journal article

Back to the future? Active learning of medical physiology in the 1900s

Abstract

In the early 1900s, teachers of medical physiology faced a problem familiar to those teaching the subject in a contemporary setting: too much information, too little time, too many students in crowded rooms, and exams that discouraged real learning. They wanted students to question authority and demand evidence and thus be better prepared for medicine. Their solution was to bring students into laboratories and minimize didactic learning as they felt strongly that useful information could not be obtained merely from books. Thus, they were strong proponents of what we now call active learning.

Authors

Rangachari PK

Journal

Advances in Physiology Education, Vol. 31, No. 4, pp. 283–287

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Publication Date

January 1, 2007

DOI

10.1152/advan.00053.2007

ISSN

1043-4046

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