The Harvard Medical School Pathways Curriculum: A Comprehensive Curricular Evaluation

Sullivan, Amy M.; Krupat, Edward; Dienstag, Jules L.; McSparron, Jakob I.; Pelletier, Stephen R.; Fazio, Sara B.; Fleenor, Thomas J.; Dalrymple, John L.; Hundert, Edward M.; Schwartzstein, Richard M.

The Harvard Medical School Pathways Curriculum: A Comprehensive Curricular Evaluation

Sullivan, Amy M.; Krupat, Edward; Dienstag, Jules L.; McSparron, Jakob I.; Pelletier, Stephen R.; Fazio, Sara B.; Fleenor, Thomas J.; Dalrymple, John L.; Hundert, Edward M.; Schwartzstein, Richard M.

Abstract

PURPOSE: The Harvard Medical School Pathways curriculum represents a major reform effort. Our goals were to enhance reasoning and clinical skills and improve the learning environment and students’ approach to learning via use of collaborative, case-based pedagogy; early clinical exposure; and enhanced approaches to teaching and evaluating clinical skills. We evaluated the impact of Pathways on key outcomes related to these goals. MATERIALS AND METHODS: In this prospective, mixed-methods study, we compared the last prior-curriculum cohort (2014 matriculation, n = 135) and first new-curriculum cohort (2015 matriculation, n = 135). Measures included Likert-type surveys, focus groups, and test scores to assess outcomes. RESULTS: Compared with prior-curriculum students, new-curriculum students reported higher mean preclerkship learning environment ratings (Educational Climate Inventory, 62.4 versus 51.9, p < 0.0001) and greater satisfaction with the quality of their preclerkship education (88% versus 73%, p = 0.0007). Mean USMLE Step-1 and Step-2 scores did not differ between groups. At graduation, new-curriculum students rated their medical school experience higher in 6 of 7 domains, including ‘fostering a culture of curiosity and inquiry’ (4.3 versus 3.9, p = 0.006) and focus on ‘student-centered learning’ (3.9 versus 3.4, p = 0.002). CONCLUSIONS: The new curriculum outperformed or was equal to the prior one on most measures of learning environment and perceived quality of education, without a decline in medical knowledge or clinical skills. Robust longitudinal evaluation provided important feedback for ongoing curriculum improvement.

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Medical Teacher
2022
Profession(s)
Physicians
Topic(s)
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Resource Types
Peer-Reviewed Research
Study Type(s)
Mixed Methods Study
Action Strategy Area(s)
Worker & Learner Engagement
Setting(s)
Academic
Academic Role(s)
Students
No items found.