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Diş Hekimliğinde Preklinik ve Klinik Eğitim Çeşitliliği

Year 2019, Volume: 6 Issue: 5, 37 - 51, 02.12.2019
https://doi.org/10.15311/selcukdentj.563351

Abstract

Diş hekimliği eğitiminin esas amacı;
öğrencilere klinik uygulamaları geliştirmek için yardımcı olmaktır. Klinik
eğitim; diş hekimliği müfredatının dörtte üçünden fazlasını kapsar ve
çoğunlukla dişlerin protetik veya restoratif işlemleri için gerekli olan
psikomotor becerileri geliştirmeye yöneliktir. Öğrenciler; bir seri tanımlanmış
beceriyi fakülte kliniklerinde eğitmenlerin gözetiminde, uygulama yaparak
tecrübe ederler. Humanistik eğitim standartları için gereken simülasyon hasta
olarak fantomların kullanıldığı preklinik eğitim; genellikle restoratif
işlemlerle sınırlıdır. Preklinik laboratuvarlarında yapılan bu eğitim; klinikte
hastalarla iletişim, enfeksiyon kontrolü ve klinik uygulama aşamaları konusunda
öğrencilerin tecrübe kazanmalarını sağlamada zayıf kalır. Bu derleme
çalışmasında; sanal gerçeklik, bilgisayar destekli ve kendi kendine yapılan
değerlendirmeler, standardize hastalar, toplum destekli klinik uygulamalar ve
vaka tamamlama esasına dayanan klinik uygulamalar gibi güncel preklinik ve
klinik eğitim modelleri tartışılarak, diş hekimliği öğrencilerinin becerilerinin
iyileştirilmesine yönelik öneriler getirilmektedir.

References

  • 1. Perry S, Burrow MF, Leung WK, Bridges SM. Simulation and curriculum design: a global survey in dental education. Aust Dent J 2017;62:453-63.
  • 2. Bridges S, Yiu CK, Botelho MG. Design considerations for an integrated, problem-based curriculum. Med Sci Educ 2016;26:365–73.
  • 3. Lu J, Bridges SM, Hmelo-Silver CE. Problem-based learning. Sawyer K, ed. Cambridge Handbook of Learning Sciences Vol. 2. Netherlands: Cambridge University Press, 2014.
  • 4. Manogue M, McLoughlin J, Christersson C, et al. Curriculum structure, content, learning and assessment in European undergraduate dental education-update 2010. Eur J Dent Educ 2011;15:133–41.
  • 5. Haden NK, Hendricson WD, Kassebaum DK, Ranney RR, Weinstein G, Anderson EL. Curriculum change in dental education, 2003-09. J Dent Educ 2010;74:539–57.
  • 6. Shuler CF. Dental school: balancing education and training. J Dent Educ 2014;78:655–6.
  • 7. American Dental Education Association. Competencies for the New General Dentist. J Dent Ed 2011;75:932–5.
  • 8. Albino JE, Young SK, Neumann LM, Kramer GA, Andrieu SC, Henson L. Assessing dental students’ competence: best practice recommendations in the performance assessment literature and investigation of current practices in predoctoral dental education. J Dent Educ 2008;72:1405-35.
  • 9. Bertoli E, Lawson KP, Bishop SS. Dental Students’ Skills Assessments: Comparisons of Daily Clinical Grades and Clinical and Laboratory Assessments. J Dent Educ 2018; 82: 417-23.
  • 10. Gonzalez MAG, Abu Kasim NH, Naimie Z. Soft skills and dental education. European J Dent Educ 2013; 17:73-82.
  • 11. Farmer R. Humanistic education and self-actualization theory. Education.105 :162-72.
  • 12. Schunk, D. H. Learning theories: An educational perspective. New York, NY, England: Macmillan Publishing Co, Inc., 2012.
  • 13. Özvarış ŞB. Hacettepe Halk Sağlığı Vakfı Yayınları, Eğitim Becerileri Rehberi, 1999.
  • 14. Licari FW, Evans CA. Clinical and Community-Based Education in U.S. Dental Schools J Dent Education. 2017; 81: 81-7.
  • 15. Cederberg RA, Bentley DA, Halpin R, Valenza JA. Use of virtual patients in dental education: a survey of U.S. and Canadian dental schools, J Densoft Educ 2012;76: 1358–64.
  • 16. Park SE, Tsao A. The Role of Online Learning in Radiographic Diagnosis in Dental Education. J Educ and Training Studies 2016; 4: 189-93.
  • 17. Field J, Stone S, Orsini C, Hussain A, Vital S, Crothers A, Walmsley D. Curriculum content and assessment of pre-clinical dental skills: A survey of undergraduate dental education in Europe. Eur J Dent Educ 2018;22:122-7.
  • 18. Eaton C. “I don’t get it”, – the challenge of teaching reflective practice to health and care practitioners. Reflective Pract. 2016;17:159-66.
  • 19. Thilakumara IP, Jayasinghe RM, Rasnayaka SK, Jayasinghe VP, Abeysundara S. Effectiveness of Procedural Video Versus Live Demonstrations in Teaching Laboratory Techniques to Dental Students J Dent Educ 2018; 82: 898-904.
  • 20. Scalese RJ, Obeso VT, Issenberg SB. Simulation technology for skills training and competency assessment in medical education. J Gen Intern Med 2008: 23: 46–49.
  • 21. Al-Saud LM, Mushtaq F, Allsop MJ, Culmer PC, Mirghani I, Yates E et al. Feedback and motor skill acquisition using a haptic dental simulator. Eur J Dent Educ 2017; 21: 240–7.
  • 22. Quinn F, Keogh P, McDonald A, Hussey D. A pilot study comparing the effectiveness of conventional training and virtual reality simulation in the skills acquisition of junior dental students. Eur J Dent Educ 2003;7:164–9.
  • 23. Pohlenz P, Grobe A, Petersik A, Sterngerg N, Pflesser B, Pommert A. Virtual dental surgery as a new educational tool in dental school. J Craniomaxillofac Surg 2010;38:560–4.
  • 24. Shumway-Cook A, Woollacott MH. Motor control: translating research into clinical practice. 4th edn. Philadelphia: Wolters Kluwer Health/Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2012.
  • 25. Feil PH, Reed T, Hart JK. Continuous knowledge of results and psychomotor skill acquisition. J Dent Educ 1986: 50: 300-3.
  • 26. Wulf G, Shea CH. Principles derived from the study of simple skills do not generalize to complex skill learning. Psychon Bull Rev 2002: 9: 185–211.
  • 27. Huegel JC, O’Malley MK. Progressive haptic and visual guidance for training in a virtual dynamic task. In: Proceedings IEEE Haptics Symp 2010; (April): 343–350.
  • 28. Strom P, Hedman L, Sarna L, Kjellin A, Wredmark T, Fellander-Tsai L. Early exposure to haptic feedback enhances performance in surgical simulator training: a prospective randomized crossover study in surgical residents. Surg Endosc 2006;20:1383–8.
  • 29. Bethea BT, Okamura AM, Kitagawa M, Fitton TP, Cattaneo SM, Gott VL. Application of haptic feedback to robotic surgery. J Laparoendosc Adv Surg Tech A 2004;14:191–5.
  • 30. Panait L, Akkary E, Bell RL, Roberts KE, Dudrick SJ, Duffy AJ.The role of haptic feedback in laparoscopic simulation training. J Surg Res 2009;156:312–6.
  • 31. Sewell C, Peddamatham S, Tan HZ, Tan Hz, Morris D, Salisbury K. The effect of virtual training on real surgical drilling proficiency. EuroHaptics Conference and symposium on haptic interfaces for virtual environment and teleoperator systems, Tsukaba; 2007:601–603.
  • 32. Buchanan JA. Use of simulation technology in dental education. J Dent Educ 2001: 65: 1225–1231.
  • 33. Nilsson TA, Hedman R, Ahlqvist JB. A randomized trial of simulationbased versus conventional training of dental student skill at interpreting spatial information in radiographs. Simul Heal 2007: 2: 164–169.
  • 34. Wierinck E, Puttemans V, Swinnen S, van Steenberghe D. Effect of augmented visual feedback from a virtual reality simulation system on manual dexterity training. Eur J Dent Educ 2005: 9: 10-16.
  • 35. Gratton DG, Kwon SR, Blanchette D, Aquilino SA. Impact of Digital Tooth Preparation Evaluation Technology on Preclinical Dental Students’ Technical and Self-Evaluation Skills. J Dent Educ 2016; 80(1): 91-9.
  • 36. Guenzel PJ, Knight GW, Feil PH. Designing preclinical instruction of psychomotor skills (IV)-instructional engineering: evaluation phase. J Dent Educ 1995;59(4): 489-94.
  • 37. Johnson GM, Halket CA, Ferguson GP, Perry J. Using Standardized Patients to Teach Complete Denture Procedures in Second Year of Dental School J Dent Educ 2017; 81(3): 340-6.
  • 38. McKenzie CT, Tilashalski KR, Peterson DT, White ML. Effectiveness of standardized patient simulations in teach¬ing clinical communication skills to dental students. J Dent Educ 2017;81(10):1179-86.
  • 39. Anders PL, Scherer YK, Hatton M, Antonson D, Austin-Ketch T, Campbell-Heider N. Using Standardized Patients to Teach Interprofessional Competencies to Dental Students. J Dent Educ 2016; 80(1): 65-72.
  • 40. Brender E, Burke A, Glass RM. Standardized patients. JAMA 2005;294(9):1172.
  • 41. Walsh SE, Singleton JA, Worth CT, Krugler J, Moore R, Wesley G.Tobacco cessation counseling training with standardized patients. J Dent Educ 2007;71(9):1171-8.
  • 42. Broder HL, Janal M, Mitnick DM, Rodriquez JY, Sischo L. Communica¬tion skills in dental students: new data regarding reten¬tion and generalization of training effects. J Dent Educ 2015;79:940-8.
  • 43. American Dental Education Association. ADEA competencies for the new general dentist. J Dent Educ 2017;81:844-7 (p 844).
  • 44. Hendricson W, Anderson E, Andrieu S, Chadwick DG, Cole JR, George MC. Does faculty development enhance teaching effectiveness? J Dent Educ 2007;71:1513-33.
  • 45. Victoroff KZ, Hogan S. Students’ perceptions of effective learning experiences in dental schools: a qualitative study using a critical incident technique. J Dent Educ 2006;70:124–32.
  • 46. Graffam B. Deriving better questions: creating better clinical instruction. Clin Teach. 2008;5:98–102.
  • 47. Collins A., Brown JS, Newman SE. Cognitive apprenticeship: teaching the crafts of reading, writing, and mathematics. In: Resnick LB ed. Knowing, Learning, and Instruction: Essays in Honor of Robert Glaser. Hillsdale, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc; 1989:453–494.
  • 48. Stalmeijer RE, Dolmans DHJM, Wolfhagen IHAP, Muijtjens AMM, Scherpbier AJJA. The development of an instrument for evaluating clinical teachers: involving stakeholders to determine content validity. Med Teach. 2008;30:272-7.
  • 49. Rutkauskas J, Seale S, Casamassimo P, Rutkauskas JS. Preparedness of entering pediatric dentistry residents: advanced pediatric program directors’ and first-year residents’ perspectives. J Dent Educ 2015;79:1265-71.
  • 50. Holmes DC, Boston DW, Budenz AW, Licari FW. Predoctoral clinical curriculum models at U.S. and Canadian dental schools. J Dent Educ 2003;67:1302–11.
  • 51. Makarem SC, Coe JM. Patient retention at dental school clinics: a marketing perspective. J Dent Educ 2014;78:1513–20.
  • 52. Formicola AJ, Bailit HL. Community-based dental education: history, current status, and future. J Dent Educ 2012;76:98-106.
  • 53. Formicola AJ, Myers R, Hasler JF, Peterson M, Dodge W, Bailit HL. Evolution of dental school clinics as patient care delivery centers. J Dent Educ 2006;70:1271–88.
  • 54. DePaola DP. The revitalization of U.S. dental education. J Dent Educ 2008;72:28–42.
  • 55. Cohen DW, Cormier PP, JL. Educating the dentist of the future: the Pennsylvania experiment. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1985.
  • 56. McFarland KK, Nayar P, Ojha D, Chandak A, Gupta N, Lange B. Impact of Community-Based Dental Education on Attainment of ADEA Competencies: Students’ Self-Ratings. J Dent Educ 2016; 80:670-6.
  • 57. Commission on Dental Accreditation. Accreditation standards for dental education programs. 2013. At: www.ada.org/~/media/CODA/Files/predoc.ashx. Accessed 15 July 2015.
  • 58. DeCastro JE, Matheson PB, Panagakos FS, Stewart Dci Feldman CA. Alumni perspectives on community-based and traditional curricula. J Dent Educ 2003;67:418-26.
  • 59. Bean CY. Community-based dental education at The Ohio State University: the OHIO project. J Dent Educ 2011;75:25-35.
  • 60. Mascarenhas AK. Community-based dental education at Boston University. J Dent Educ 2011;75:S21-4.
  • 61. Piskorowski WA, Stenafac SJ, Fitzgerald M, Green TG, Krell RE. Influence of community-based dental education on dental students’ preparation and intent to treat underserved populations. J Dent Educ 2012;76:534-9.
  • 62. Knight GW. Community-based dental education at the University of Illinois at Chicago. J Dent Educ 2011;75:S14-20.
  • 63. Nayar P, McFarland K, Lange B, Ojha D, Chandak A. Supervising dentists’ perspectives on the effectiveness of communitybased dental education. J Dent Educ 2014;78:1139-4.
  • 64. Park SE, Howell TH. Implementation of a Patient-Centered Approach to Clinical Dental Education: A Five-Year Reflection. J Dent Educ 2015; 79: 523-9.
  • 65. Park SE, Timothe P, Nalliah R, et al. A case completion curriculum for clinical dental education: replacing numerical requirements with patient-based comprehensive care. J Dent Educ 2011;75:1411-6.
  • 66. Park SE, Susarla HK, Nalliah R, Timothe P, Howell TH, Karimbux NY. Does a case completion curriculum influence dental students’ clinical productivity? J Dent Educ 2012;76:602-8.
  • 67. Singh G, Kaur R, Mahajan A, Thomas AM, Singh T. Piloting Direct Observation of Procedural Skills in Dental Education in India. Int J Appl Basic Med Res 2017; 7(4):239-42.
  • 68. Formicola AJ. Current state of dental education: Executive summary J Dent Educ 2017; 81(8): 1.

Preclinical and Clinical Education Variety for Dentistry

Year 2019, Volume: 6 Issue: 5, 37 - 51, 02.12.2019
https://doi.org/10.15311/selcukdentj.563351

Abstract

Main
objective of dental education is to help students to develop their clinical
skills. The clinical training covering the three-quarters of overall dental
curriculum focuses mainly on developing the psychomotor skills required for
restorative and prosthetic procedures. Dental students exercise a serial of
previously defined professional skills under the supervision in their faculty
clinics. Preclinical training using manikins as a simulated patient neccessary
for a humanistic education standards is usually limited to restorative
procedures. Preclinical education held in laboratories do not usually support
students to gain professional and interprofessional experiences related to
patient relations, control of enfection and the steps of clinical procedures.
In this review study, today’s preclinical and clinical training models such as
virtual reality, computer-based assesments, self-evaluating, standardized
patients, community-based clinical training and case completion model are being
discussed to be able to make some suggestions for improving skills of dental
students.

References

  • 1. Perry S, Burrow MF, Leung WK, Bridges SM. Simulation and curriculum design: a global survey in dental education. Aust Dent J 2017;62:453-63.
  • 2. Bridges S, Yiu CK, Botelho MG. Design considerations for an integrated, problem-based curriculum. Med Sci Educ 2016;26:365–73.
  • 3. Lu J, Bridges SM, Hmelo-Silver CE. Problem-based learning. Sawyer K, ed. Cambridge Handbook of Learning Sciences Vol. 2. Netherlands: Cambridge University Press, 2014.
  • 4. Manogue M, McLoughlin J, Christersson C, et al. Curriculum structure, content, learning and assessment in European undergraduate dental education-update 2010. Eur J Dent Educ 2011;15:133–41.
  • 5. Haden NK, Hendricson WD, Kassebaum DK, Ranney RR, Weinstein G, Anderson EL. Curriculum change in dental education, 2003-09. J Dent Educ 2010;74:539–57.
  • 6. Shuler CF. Dental school: balancing education and training. J Dent Educ 2014;78:655–6.
  • 7. American Dental Education Association. Competencies for the New General Dentist. J Dent Ed 2011;75:932–5.
  • 8. Albino JE, Young SK, Neumann LM, Kramer GA, Andrieu SC, Henson L. Assessing dental students’ competence: best practice recommendations in the performance assessment literature and investigation of current practices in predoctoral dental education. J Dent Educ 2008;72:1405-35.
  • 9. Bertoli E, Lawson KP, Bishop SS. Dental Students’ Skills Assessments: Comparisons of Daily Clinical Grades and Clinical and Laboratory Assessments. J Dent Educ 2018; 82: 417-23.
  • 10. Gonzalez MAG, Abu Kasim NH, Naimie Z. Soft skills and dental education. European J Dent Educ 2013; 17:73-82.
  • 11. Farmer R. Humanistic education and self-actualization theory. Education.105 :162-72.
  • 12. Schunk, D. H. Learning theories: An educational perspective. New York, NY, England: Macmillan Publishing Co, Inc., 2012.
  • 13. Özvarış ŞB. Hacettepe Halk Sağlığı Vakfı Yayınları, Eğitim Becerileri Rehberi, 1999.
  • 14. Licari FW, Evans CA. Clinical and Community-Based Education in U.S. Dental Schools J Dent Education. 2017; 81: 81-7.
  • 15. Cederberg RA, Bentley DA, Halpin R, Valenza JA. Use of virtual patients in dental education: a survey of U.S. and Canadian dental schools, J Densoft Educ 2012;76: 1358–64.
  • 16. Park SE, Tsao A. The Role of Online Learning in Radiographic Diagnosis in Dental Education. J Educ and Training Studies 2016; 4: 189-93.
  • 17. Field J, Stone S, Orsini C, Hussain A, Vital S, Crothers A, Walmsley D. Curriculum content and assessment of pre-clinical dental skills: A survey of undergraduate dental education in Europe. Eur J Dent Educ 2018;22:122-7.
  • 18. Eaton C. “I don’t get it”, – the challenge of teaching reflective practice to health and care practitioners. Reflective Pract. 2016;17:159-66.
  • 19. Thilakumara IP, Jayasinghe RM, Rasnayaka SK, Jayasinghe VP, Abeysundara S. Effectiveness of Procedural Video Versus Live Demonstrations in Teaching Laboratory Techniques to Dental Students J Dent Educ 2018; 82: 898-904.
  • 20. Scalese RJ, Obeso VT, Issenberg SB. Simulation technology for skills training and competency assessment in medical education. J Gen Intern Med 2008: 23: 46–49.
  • 21. Al-Saud LM, Mushtaq F, Allsop MJ, Culmer PC, Mirghani I, Yates E et al. Feedback and motor skill acquisition using a haptic dental simulator. Eur J Dent Educ 2017; 21: 240–7.
  • 22. Quinn F, Keogh P, McDonald A, Hussey D. A pilot study comparing the effectiveness of conventional training and virtual reality simulation in the skills acquisition of junior dental students. Eur J Dent Educ 2003;7:164–9.
  • 23. Pohlenz P, Grobe A, Petersik A, Sterngerg N, Pflesser B, Pommert A. Virtual dental surgery as a new educational tool in dental school. J Craniomaxillofac Surg 2010;38:560–4.
  • 24. Shumway-Cook A, Woollacott MH. Motor control: translating research into clinical practice. 4th edn. Philadelphia: Wolters Kluwer Health/Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2012.
  • 25. Feil PH, Reed T, Hart JK. Continuous knowledge of results and psychomotor skill acquisition. J Dent Educ 1986: 50: 300-3.
  • 26. Wulf G, Shea CH. Principles derived from the study of simple skills do not generalize to complex skill learning. Psychon Bull Rev 2002: 9: 185–211.
  • 27. Huegel JC, O’Malley MK. Progressive haptic and visual guidance for training in a virtual dynamic task. In: Proceedings IEEE Haptics Symp 2010; (April): 343–350.
  • 28. Strom P, Hedman L, Sarna L, Kjellin A, Wredmark T, Fellander-Tsai L. Early exposure to haptic feedback enhances performance in surgical simulator training: a prospective randomized crossover study in surgical residents. Surg Endosc 2006;20:1383–8.
  • 29. Bethea BT, Okamura AM, Kitagawa M, Fitton TP, Cattaneo SM, Gott VL. Application of haptic feedback to robotic surgery. J Laparoendosc Adv Surg Tech A 2004;14:191–5.
  • 30. Panait L, Akkary E, Bell RL, Roberts KE, Dudrick SJ, Duffy AJ.The role of haptic feedback in laparoscopic simulation training. J Surg Res 2009;156:312–6.
  • 31. Sewell C, Peddamatham S, Tan HZ, Tan Hz, Morris D, Salisbury K. The effect of virtual training on real surgical drilling proficiency. EuroHaptics Conference and symposium on haptic interfaces for virtual environment and teleoperator systems, Tsukaba; 2007:601–603.
  • 32. Buchanan JA. Use of simulation technology in dental education. J Dent Educ 2001: 65: 1225–1231.
  • 33. Nilsson TA, Hedman R, Ahlqvist JB. A randomized trial of simulationbased versus conventional training of dental student skill at interpreting spatial information in radiographs. Simul Heal 2007: 2: 164–169.
  • 34. Wierinck E, Puttemans V, Swinnen S, van Steenberghe D. Effect of augmented visual feedback from a virtual reality simulation system on manual dexterity training. Eur J Dent Educ 2005: 9: 10-16.
  • 35. Gratton DG, Kwon SR, Blanchette D, Aquilino SA. Impact of Digital Tooth Preparation Evaluation Technology on Preclinical Dental Students’ Technical and Self-Evaluation Skills. J Dent Educ 2016; 80(1): 91-9.
  • 36. Guenzel PJ, Knight GW, Feil PH. Designing preclinical instruction of psychomotor skills (IV)-instructional engineering: evaluation phase. J Dent Educ 1995;59(4): 489-94.
  • 37. Johnson GM, Halket CA, Ferguson GP, Perry J. Using Standardized Patients to Teach Complete Denture Procedures in Second Year of Dental School J Dent Educ 2017; 81(3): 340-6.
  • 38. McKenzie CT, Tilashalski KR, Peterson DT, White ML. Effectiveness of standardized patient simulations in teach¬ing clinical communication skills to dental students. J Dent Educ 2017;81(10):1179-86.
  • 39. Anders PL, Scherer YK, Hatton M, Antonson D, Austin-Ketch T, Campbell-Heider N. Using Standardized Patients to Teach Interprofessional Competencies to Dental Students. J Dent Educ 2016; 80(1): 65-72.
  • 40. Brender E, Burke A, Glass RM. Standardized patients. JAMA 2005;294(9):1172.
  • 41. Walsh SE, Singleton JA, Worth CT, Krugler J, Moore R, Wesley G.Tobacco cessation counseling training with standardized patients. J Dent Educ 2007;71(9):1171-8.
  • 42. Broder HL, Janal M, Mitnick DM, Rodriquez JY, Sischo L. Communica¬tion skills in dental students: new data regarding reten¬tion and generalization of training effects. J Dent Educ 2015;79:940-8.
  • 43. American Dental Education Association. ADEA competencies for the new general dentist. J Dent Educ 2017;81:844-7 (p 844).
  • 44. Hendricson W, Anderson E, Andrieu S, Chadwick DG, Cole JR, George MC. Does faculty development enhance teaching effectiveness? J Dent Educ 2007;71:1513-33.
  • 45. Victoroff KZ, Hogan S. Students’ perceptions of effective learning experiences in dental schools: a qualitative study using a critical incident technique. J Dent Educ 2006;70:124–32.
  • 46. Graffam B. Deriving better questions: creating better clinical instruction. Clin Teach. 2008;5:98–102.
  • 47. Collins A., Brown JS, Newman SE. Cognitive apprenticeship: teaching the crafts of reading, writing, and mathematics. In: Resnick LB ed. Knowing, Learning, and Instruction: Essays in Honor of Robert Glaser. Hillsdale, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc; 1989:453–494.
  • 48. Stalmeijer RE, Dolmans DHJM, Wolfhagen IHAP, Muijtjens AMM, Scherpbier AJJA. The development of an instrument for evaluating clinical teachers: involving stakeholders to determine content validity. Med Teach. 2008;30:272-7.
  • 49. Rutkauskas J, Seale S, Casamassimo P, Rutkauskas JS. Preparedness of entering pediatric dentistry residents: advanced pediatric program directors’ and first-year residents’ perspectives. J Dent Educ 2015;79:1265-71.
  • 50. Holmes DC, Boston DW, Budenz AW, Licari FW. Predoctoral clinical curriculum models at U.S. and Canadian dental schools. J Dent Educ 2003;67:1302–11.
  • 51. Makarem SC, Coe JM. Patient retention at dental school clinics: a marketing perspective. J Dent Educ 2014;78:1513–20.
  • 52. Formicola AJ, Bailit HL. Community-based dental education: history, current status, and future. J Dent Educ 2012;76:98-106.
  • 53. Formicola AJ, Myers R, Hasler JF, Peterson M, Dodge W, Bailit HL. Evolution of dental school clinics as patient care delivery centers. J Dent Educ 2006;70:1271–88.
  • 54. DePaola DP. The revitalization of U.S. dental education. J Dent Educ 2008;72:28–42.
  • 55. Cohen DW, Cormier PP, JL. Educating the dentist of the future: the Pennsylvania experiment. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1985.
  • 56. McFarland KK, Nayar P, Ojha D, Chandak A, Gupta N, Lange B. Impact of Community-Based Dental Education on Attainment of ADEA Competencies: Students’ Self-Ratings. J Dent Educ 2016; 80:670-6.
  • 57. Commission on Dental Accreditation. Accreditation standards for dental education programs. 2013. At: www.ada.org/~/media/CODA/Files/predoc.ashx. Accessed 15 July 2015.
  • 58. DeCastro JE, Matheson PB, Panagakos FS, Stewart Dci Feldman CA. Alumni perspectives on community-based and traditional curricula. J Dent Educ 2003;67:418-26.
  • 59. Bean CY. Community-based dental education at The Ohio State University: the OHIO project. J Dent Educ 2011;75:25-35.
  • 60. Mascarenhas AK. Community-based dental education at Boston University. J Dent Educ 2011;75:S21-4.
  • 61. Piskorowski WA, Stenafac SJ, Fitzgerald M, Green TG, Krell RE. Influence of community-based dental education on dental students’ preparation and intent to treat underserved populations. J Dent Educ 2012;76:534-9.
  • 62. Knight GW. Community-based dental education at the University of Illinois at Chicago. J Dent Educ 2011;75:S14-20.
  • 63. Nayar P, McFarland K, Lange B, Ojha D, Chandak A. Supervising dentists’ perspectives on the effectiveness of communitybased dental education. J Dent Educ 2014;78:1139-4.
  • 64. Park SE, Howell TH. Implementation of a Patient-Centered Approach to Clinical Dental Education: A Five-Year Reflection. J Dent Educ 2015; 79: 523-9.
  • 65. Park SE, Timothe P, Nalliah R, et al. A case completion curriculum for clinical dental education: replacing numerical requirements with patient-based comprehensive care. J Dent Educ 2011;75:1411-6.
  • 66. Park SE, Susarla HK, Nalliah R, Timothe P, Howell TH, Karimbux NY. Does a case completion curriculum influence dental students’ clinical productivity? J Dent Educ 2012;76:602-8.
  • 67. Singh G, Kaur R, Mahajan A, Thomas AM, Singh T. Piloting Direct Observation of Procedural Skills in Dental Education in India. Int J Appl Basic Med Res 2017; 7(4):239-42.
  • 68. Formicola AJ. Current state of dental education: Executive summary J Dent Educ 2017; 81(8): 1.
There are 68 citations in total.

Details

Primary Language Turkish
Subjects Dentistry
Journal Section Review
Authors

Kadriye Funda Akaltan 0000-0001-6744-6312

Publication Date December 2, 2019
Submission Date May 11, 2019
Published in Issue Year 2019 Volume: 6 Issue: 5

Cite

Vancouver Akaltan KF. Diş Hekimliğinde Preklinik ve Klinik Eğitim Çeşitliliği. Selcuk Dent J. 2019;6(5):37-51.