Elaine Van Melle
Queen's University
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Featured researches published by Elaine Van Melle.
Academic Medicine | 2016
Olle ten Cate; Danielle Hart; Felix Ankel; Jamiu O. Busari; Robert Englander; Nicholas Glasgow; Eric S. Holmboe; William Iobst; Elise Lovell; Linda Snell; Claire Touchie; Elaine Van Melle
The decision to trust a medical trainee with the critical responsibility to care for a patient is fundamental to clinical training. When carefully and deliberately made, such decisions can serve as significant stimuli for learning and also shape the assessment of trainees. Holding back entrustment decisions too much may hamper the trainee’s development toward unsupervised practice. When carelessly made, however, they jeopardize patient safety. Entrustment decision-making processes, therefore, deserve careful analysis. Members (including the authors) of the International Competency-Based Medical Education Collaborative conducted a content analysis of the entrustment decision-making process in health care training during a two-day summit in September 2013 and subsequently reviewed the pertinent literature to arrive at a description of the critical features of this process, which informs this article. The authors discuss theoretical backgrounds and terminology of trust and entrustment in the clinical workplace. The competency-based movement and the introduction of entrustable professional activities force educators to rethink the grounds for assessment in the workplace. Anticipating a decision to grant autonomy at a designated level of supervision appears to align better with health care practice than do most current assessment practices. The authors distinguish different modes of trust and entrustment decisions and elaborate five categories, each with related factors, that determine when decisions to trust trainees are made: the trainee, supervisor, situation, task, and the relationship between trainee and supervisor. The authors’ aim in this article is to lay a theoretical foundation for a new approach to workplace training and assessment.
Academic Medicine | 2016
Carol Carraccio; Robert Englander; Elaine Van Melle; Olle ten Cate; Jocelyn Lockyer; Ming Ka Chan; Jason R. Frank; Linda Snell
The International Competency-Based Medical Education (ICBME) Collaborators have been working since 2009 to promote understanding of competency-based medical education (CBME) and accelerate its uptake worldwide. This article presents a charter, supported by a literature-based rationale, which is meant to provide a shared mental model of CBME that will serve as a path forward in its widespread implementation.At a 2013 summit, the ICBME Collaborators laid the groundwork for this charter. Here, the fundamental principles of CBME and professional responsibilities of medical educators in its implementation process are described. The authors outline three fundamental principles: (1) Medical education must be based on the health needs of the populations served; (2) the primary focus of education and training should be the desired outcomes for learners rather than the structure and process of the educational system; and (3) the formation of a physician should be seamless across the continuum of education, training, and practice.Building on these principles, medical educators must demonstrate commitment to teaching, assessing, and role modeling the range of identified competencies. In the clinical setting, they must provide supervision that balances patient safety with the professional development of learners, being transparent with stakeholders about level of supervision needed. They must use effective and efficient assessment strategies and tools for basing transition decisions on competence rather than time in training, empowering learners to be active participants in their learning and assessment. Finally, advancing CBME requires program evaluation and research, faculty development, and a collaborative approach to realize its full potential.
Education and Information Technologies | 2003
Elaine Van Melle; Luigia Cimellaro; Lyn M. Shulha
One vision for Ontario schools is that the use of information and communication technology (ICT) will profoundly change both teaching and learning. Given the diversity of school settings, however, system-wide ICT integration and implementation must necessarily be defined in multiple ways. This paper presents a decision-making framework for guiding the infusion of ICT into different school settings. First, sustainability of the ICT initiative is the identified as the key goal. Next, multiple contextual variables are distilled into five essential qualities. Then, sustainability and the essential elements are combined. The result is a dynamic framework that can be used to identify specific priorities for implementation and strategies for evaluation of ICT initiatives. Finally, it is illustrated how the framework can be used to guide the successful infusion of ICT in any situation, regardless of a schools previous experience with ICT.
Postgraduate Medical Journal | 2015
Jonathan Sherbino; Vineet M. Arora; Elaine Van Melle; Robert W. Rogers; Jason R. Frank; Eric S. Holmboe
Background Social media are increasingly used in health professions education. How can innovations and research that incorporate social media applications be adjudicated as scholarship? Objective To define the criteria for social media-based scholarship in health professions education. Method In 2014 the International Conference on Residency Education hosted a consensus conference of health professions educators with expertise in social media. An expert working group drafted consensus statements based on a literature review. Draft consensus statements were posted on an open interactive online platform 2 weeks prior to the conference. In-person and virtual (via Twitter) participants modified, added or deleted draft consensus statements in an iterative fashion during a facilitated 2 h session. Final consensus statements were unanimously endorsed. Results A review of the literature demonstrated no existing criteria for social media-based scholarship. The consensus of 52 health professions educators from 20 organisations in four countries defined four key features of social media-based scholarship. It must (1) be original; (2) advance the field of health professions education by building on theory, research or best practice; (3) be archived and disseminated; and (4) provide the health professions education community with the ability to comment on and provide feedback in a transparent fashion that informs wider discussion. Conclusions Not all social media activities meet the standard of education scholarship. This paper clarifies the criteria, championing social media-based scholarship as a legitimate academic activity in health professions education.
Medical Education | 2014
Elaine Van Melle; Jocelyn Lockyer; Vernon Curran; Susan Lieff; Christina St.Onge; Mark Goldszmidt
Education scholarship (ES) is integral to the transformation of medical education. Faculty members who engage in ES need encouragement and recognition of this work. Beginning with the definition of ES as ‘an umbrella term which can encompass both research and innovation in health professions education’, and which as such represents an activity that is separate and distinct from teaching and leadership, the purpose of our study was to explore how promotion policies and processes are used in Canadian medical schools to support and promote ES.
Canadian Journal of Microbiology | 1984
Irving E. Salit; Elaine Van Melle; Lewis Tomalty
Educational Technology & Society | 2002
John R. Kirby; Christopher Knapper; Sue A. Maki; William J. Egnatoff; Elaine Van Melle
Microbiology Education | 2000
Elaine Van Melle; Lewis Tomalty
Academic Medicine | 2016
Elaine Van Melle
Academic Medicine | 2017
Brian M. Wong; Joanne Goldman; Jeannette Goguen; Christian Base; Leahora Rotteau; Elaine Van Melle; Ayelet Kuper; Kaveh G. Shojania