Podcast series featuring visiting professors and local experts. Hosted by CLIME Associate Director Kate Mulligan, PhD, these sessions are a conversational approach to topics relevant to health professions educators.
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In this episode our guest, Nicole Woods, PhD joins Kate Mulligan, PhD to discuss how we can re-think the integration of basic and clinical sciences in medical education.
In this episode our guest, Molly Jackson, MD joins Kate Mulligan, PhD to discuss what the UWSOM Colleges program and how it brings a personalized approach to medical education and provides a deepening understanding of both fundamental clinical skills and professionalism.
In this episode David Masuda and Kate Mulligan pick up from the Part 1 and get into a few more resilience coping skills you can try in your classroom and will cover the last category for advancing student wellbeing, connecting to the environment.
In this episode our guest, David Masuda, MD joins Kate Mulligan, PhD to discuss how to incorporate teaching practices that foster wellbeing and encourage resilience to humanize the classroom.
In this episode our CLIMEcast host and Associate Director Kate Mulligan, PhD talks with Anne Browning, PhD and Megan Kennedy, MA, LMHC about the importance of centering student well-being in higher education, and specifically in our health sciences educational programs.
*Correction: Megan Kennedy joined the UW Resilience Lab in 2019 not 2018.
Get to know the new CLIME Director and Assistant Dean for Educator Development Dr. Kristina Dzara. Dr. Dzara began her new position at the University of Washington School of Medicine in April 2022.
In this episode, we explore a wealth of readily accessible resources and practical tips to go beyond just acknowledging ableism and eliminating ableist behavior, to actively supporting our disabled friends and colleagues.
Show Resources:
Bias Training: UW implicit bias training, which includes disability material (this is now required to be on search committees and is freely available to the UW community).
In this episode, our guest speakers "Evans and Feldner" share data from their CLIME-funded research project on the lived experience of ableism and allyship of students, staff and faculty at the University of Washington, who identify as D/deaf, disabled, living with a disability, or as having a chronic health condition.
Show Resources:
Bias Training: UW implicit bias training, which includes disability material (this is now required to be on search committees and is freely available to the UW community).
Episode 1 of our Anti-ableism and Disability Allyship in Medical Education Series.
In this episode our guests, Drs. Heather Feldner and Heather Evans, guide us through foundational concepts of disability, ableism and allyship, unraveling important terminology, and emphasizing the importance of language.
Dr. Addie McClintock is an Assistant Professor of Medicine in the Division of General Internal Medicine at the University of Washington School of Medicine. She practices at the University of Washington Women’s Health Care Center where she also runs the women’s health training pathway for the internal medicine residency.
Dr. Tyra Fainstad and Dr. Addie McClintock have teamed up to develop a two-prong approach to help us help our learners manage the impact of impostor phenomenon and exploring the interplay of psychological safety.
In this second episode Dr. McClintock will be broadening the conversation to describe how we can design the learning environment to create psychological safety and counter impostor phenomenon by creating healthy and functional teams.
Tyra Fainstad, MD, Associate Professor of Medicine, Department of General Internal Medicine, University of Colorado School of Medicine.
In this episode Dr. Fainstad defines impostor phenomenon, how to recognize it in our learners, and strategies you can share with your learners to help them manage it. Dr. Fainstad will be sharing her wisdom about the characteristics and impact of impostor phenomenon and offering powerful strategies that educators can use to help learners manage it.
Kali Hobson, MD., Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Fellow, Department of Psychiatry, Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Division, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA and Roberto Montenegro, MD, PhD, Assistant Professor, Department of Psychiatry, Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Division, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA
In this podcast, Drs. Kali Hobson and Roberto Montenegro describe the methods they have developed to continuously review and revise curricular content to reduce bias and enhance coverage of societal and structural factors that impact health. Dr. Montenegro, who directs the BRICC (Bias Reduction in Curricular Content) process, also lays out his vision for using technology to automate the review process to insure timely curricular enhancements and project sustainability.
In this podcast Edwin Lindo, JD, CLIME’s Associate Director of Critical Teaching and Equity and William Harris, MD, the block lead for the University of Washington School of Medicine’s Blood and Cancer Block discuss how they worked together to improve a presentation on health outcome inequality, with a specific focus on breast cancer in African American women. We created this podcast to highlight Edwin’s work as a consultant with CLIME. He is available to assist faculty in making their teaching more equitable and inclusive.
In this podcast, Belinda Fu, MD, (aka “theImprovDoc”) discusses how improv transformed her life and propelled her to found The Mayutica Institute, an educational training company, co-organize an Annual International Medical Improv Trainer Workshops, and establish ImprovDoc.org, an educational resource about the use of improvisation in medicine. She shares her approach to teaching improv as well as her personal experience of the transformative power of learning how to listen to others and oneself and say “yes and” to life.
In this podcast, Dr. Bridget O’Brien shares her perspectives on writing scholarship that is compelling and publishable. Drawing on her experience as an education researcher, a deputy editor for Teaching and Learning in Medicine, and a qualitative consultant for Academic Medicine, Dr. O’Brien offers advice on how to write an Introduction to a paper that demonstrates understanding of your topic of study and its importance to the academic community while hooking readers’ interest. Bridget O’Brien is an Associate Professor affiliated with the Office of Medical Education, Research and Development in Medical Education unit (RaDME). She teaches and mentors faculty and learners in several programs, including the UCSF-University of Utrecht doctoral program in Health Professions Education, the Health Professions Education Pathway and the Teaching Scholars Program. At the San Francisco VA, she directs scholarship and evaluation for the Center of Excellence in Primary Care Education and a Fellowship in Health Professions Education Evaluation and Research.
In this podcast, Drs. Amanda Kost, Edwin Lindo, and Roberto Montenegro return to the studio to provide some “real-life” examples of how to implement the critical teaching frameworks they introduced during their first CLIMEcast, “Do No Harm: An Introduction to Equitable Teaching.” They share strategies for framing instructional sessions about race and gender that invite critique and mutual learning, responding positively to student critique, and turning teaching challenges into learning opportunities.
Achieving a just and equitable learning environment that supports learning and the development of socially responsible physicians requires commitment to critically appraising and changing current approaches to teaching and the presentation of content that can be biased and negatively impact learners and the learning environment. In this podcast, Drs. Kost, Lindo, and Montenegro discuss frameworks that educators can use to assess their content and instruction through a critical, structural, and social justice lens.
Remediation is a structured approach to helping trainees at all levels address deficits in knowledge, skills and attitudes. In this podcast, Dr. Heidi Combs explains how to determine when remediation is needed and how to work with learners to tailor remediation plans in ways that fit their needs and help them to succeed.
Jonathan Ilgen, MD, Associate Professor, Department of Medicine, University of Washington School of Emergency Medicine, Seattle, WA
Teaching clinical reasoning involves helping learners learn a number of related skills, including observing and communicating with patients (paying close attention to cues and clues), synthesizing information, managing problems. In this podcast Dr. Jon Ilgen shares his thoughts on the kinds of tools one should ha a teaching toolbox.
Patricia A. Kritek, MD, EdM, Professor, Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care, and Sleep Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, WA
Developing teaching scripts for common teachable moments can help you maximize trainee’s learning, particularly when your teaching time is limited. In this podcast Dr. Trish Kritek shares her approach to building teaching scripts that incorporate drawings, formulas, and other small nuggets of content to teach interprofessional learners at all levels of expertise within busy clinical settings.