Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Cormac McGrath is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Cormac McGrath.


Advances in Health Sciences Education | 2014

Let’s talk about integration: a study of students’ understandings of integration

Klara Bolander Laksov; Cormac McGrath; Anna Josephson

Today, the knowledge concerning clinical reasoning is advanced enough to translate into curriculum interventions such as an integrated curriculum, in which science theory and clinical practice can be interwoven effectively. However, the interpretations of what integration means differ and the purpose of this study was to elicit how students understand integration. This study was carried out using an interpretative perspective. Medical students, in their 2nd year of study, were asked to apply basic science knowledge from all previous courses to clinical cases in an examination. Subsequent to the examination, focus group interviews were conducted. The interviews were audio recorded, transcribed and analysed by the use of qualitative content analysis. The analysis revealed how students comprehended integration: as the creation of wholeness, as relating new knowledge to core concepts, as reasoning, as application and as collaboration between teachers. The five categories were linked to three dimensions: intra-personal, inter-personal and organizational, each of which resonates with different theories of how expertise is developed. The outcome of this study adds to our understanding of how students conceptualize integration. The categories of ‘integration’ drawn out by the study are helpful in promoting further discussion of how eliciting students’ own reports of cognition and may help the ongoing design of curricula by putting students at the center of the curriculum design process.


International Journal for Academic Development | 2014

Laying bare educational crosstalk: a study of discursive repertoires in the wake of educational reform

Cormac McGrath; Klara Bolander Laksov

In the wake of the Bologna process, many European universities are undergoing comprehensive educational reform. Our attention in this paper is focused on how a medical university came to terms with the challenges presented therein. We wished to explore how educators identify, understand and deal with opportunities for change at a medical university. To accomplish this, we devised meetings between the respondents and colleagues at the university and examined the reported results of these meetings. Our results suggest that there may be substantial educational crosstalk taking place, whereby people are experiencing a communicative mismatch in terms of negotiating the meaning of change initiatives. This can act as a hindrance for implementation of educational reforms. We acknowledge that educational developers and people in leadership need to consider different ways of creating opportunities for peer review and dialogue around educational issues in order to fully embrace opportunities for change.


European Urology | 2017

KIUrologyX: Urology As You Like It—A Massive Open Online Course for Medical Students, Professionals, Patients, and Laypeople Alike

Lars Henningsohn; Nima Dastaviz; Natalia Stathakarou; Cormac McGrath

KIUrologyX is a massive open online course in clinical urology that allows a broad range of people access to important clinical knowledge. It is a course that can be made available to an unlimited number of students, professionals, patients, and their kin.


JMIR Research Protocols | 2016

Using Competency-Based Digital Open Learning Activities to Facilitate and Promote Health Professions Education (OLAmeD): A Proposal.

Christos Vaitsis; Natalia Stathakarou; Linda Barman; Nabil Zary; Cormac McGrath

Background Traditional learning in medical education has been transformed with the advent of information technology. We have recently seen global initiatives to produce online activities in an effort to scale up learning opportunities through learning management systems and massive open online courses for both undergraduate and continued professional education. Despite the positive impact of such efforts, factors such as cost, time, resources, and the specificity of educational contexts restrict the design and exchange of online medical educational activities. Objective The goal is to address the stated issues within the health professions education context while promoting learning by proposing the Online Learning Activities for Medical Education (OLAmeD) concept which builds on unified competency frameworks and generic technical standards for education. Methods We outline how frameworks used to describe a set of competencies for a specific topic in medical education across medical schools in the United States and Europe can be compared to identify commonalities that could result in a unified set of competencies representing both contexts adequately. Further, we examine how technical standards could be used to allow standardization, seamless sharing, and reusability of educational content. Results The entire process of developing and sharing OLAmeD is structured and presented in a set of steps using as example Urology as a part of clinical surgery specialization. Conclusions Beyond supporting the development, sharing, and repurposing of educational content, we expect OLAmeD to work as a tool that promotes learning and sets a base for a community of medical educational content developers across different educational contexts.


eLife | 2017

Promoting international collaboration and creativity in doctoral students

Christopher M Groen; Cormac McGrath; Katherine A. Campbell; Cecilia Götherström; Anthony J. Windebank; Natalia Landázuri

Staff from the Mayo Clinic in the US and the Karolinska Institute in Sweden describe a joint transatlantic course intended to broaden the horizons of the next generation of researchers in the field of regenerative medicine. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.26787.001


International Journal for Academic Development | 2017

Exploring dimensions of change: the case of MOOC conceptions

Cormac McGrath; Terese Stenfors-Hayes; Torgny Roxå; Klara Bolander Laksov

Abstract This paper addresses a relatively new phenomenon in higher education, Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs), and explores conceptions around this new and emerging development from the perspective of a number of stakeholders in the university. A phenomenographic approach is adopted. The study explores how different stakeholders at a university perceive the MOOC phenomenon, and reflects on how the many conceptions stakeholders adhere to are made meaningful for academic developers in their role as ‘partners in arms’. The conceptions run across a continuum from the local and narrow to the global and broad. The study identifies challenges to change agency in a higher education institution.


Health science journal | 2017

Corporate Social Responsibility and Population Health

Gloria Macassa; Jose da Cruz Francisco; Cormac McGrath

In recent decades, corporate social responsibility (CSR) as part of socially sustainable business organizations operations has become a common practice across developed and developing countries. The objective of this mini review is to reflect on the potential role that CSR might have on the health of stakeholders (employees and society in general). We suggest that there is an opportunity for business to become agents of change and contribute to improved population health. Therefore, public health researchers need to explore how business organizations can, through CSR impact population health currently and in years to come. This would occur through helping to address global challenges in the workplace and immediate local communities, but above all through identifying the role businesses play in contributing to sustainable development and sustainable population health/health promotion across entire societies regardless of their stage of economic development.


Education Sciences | 2018

MOOC Learners’ Engagement with Two Variants of Virtual Patients: A Randomised Trial

Natalia Stathakarou; Marcel Leon Scully; Andrzej A. Kononowicz; Lars Henningsohn; Nabil Zary; Cormac McGrath


Academic Psychiatry | 2017

Virtual Patients in a Behavioral Medicine Massive Open Online Course (MOOC): A Qualitative and Quantitative Analysis of Participants’ Perceptions

Anne H. Berman; Gabriele Biguet; Natalia Stathakarou; Beata Westin-Hägglöf; Kerstin Jeding; Cormac McGrath; Nabil Zary; Andrzej A. Kononowicz


medical informatics europe | 2018

Modelling Feedback in Virtual Patients: An Iterative Approach.

Natalia Stathakarou; Andrzej A. Kononowicz; Lars Henningsohn; Cormac McGrath

Collaboration


Dive into the Cormac McGrath's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andrzej A. Kononowicz

Jagiellonian University Medical College

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge