Leveraging accreditation to integrate sustainable information literacy instruction into the medical school curriculum

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5195/jmla.2018.276

Keywords:

Information Literacy, Flipped Classroom, Curriculum

Abstract

Background: While the term “information literacy” is not often used, the skills associated with that concept are now central to the mission and accreditation process of medical schools. The simultaneous emphasis on critical thinking skills, knowledge acquisition, active learning, and development and acceptance of technology perfectly positions libraries to be central to and integrated into the curriculum.

Case Presentation: This case study discusses how one medical school and health sciences library leveraged accreditation to develop a sustainable and efficient flipped classroom model for teaching information literacy skills to first-year medical students. The model provides first-year medical students with the opportunity to learn information literacy skills, critical thinking skills, and teamwork, and then practice these skills throughout the pre-clerkship years.

Conclusions: The curriculum was deemed a success and will be included in next year’s first-year curriculum. Faculty have reported substantial improvements in the information sources that first-year medical students are using in subsequent clinical reasoning conferences and in other parts of the curriculum. The effectiveness of the curriculum model was assessed using a rubric.

Author Biography

Natalie Tagge, Education Services Librarian, Ginsburg Health Sciences Library, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA

Education Services Librarian, MS

References

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Published

2018-07-02

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Case Report