| Literature DB >> 12390257 |
Alphons Plasschaert1, Marcia Boyd, Sandra Andrieu, Robin Basker, Roberto J Beltran, Giorgio Blasi, Barbara Chadwick, David Chambers, Cecilia Christersson, Fernando Haddock, Thomas Kerschbaum, Stan Kogon, Gyorgy Kovesi, Fusun Ozer, Hari Parkash, Juanita E Villamil, Richard I Vogel, Anne Wolowski.
Abstract
Competency-based education, introduced approximately 10 years ago, has become the preferred method and generally the accepted norm for delivering and assessing the outcomes of undergraduate (European) or predoctoral (North America) dental education in many parts of the world. As a philosophical approach, the competency statements drive national agencies in external programme review and at the institutional level in the definition of curriculum development, student assessment and programme evaluation. It would be presumptuous of this group to prescribe competences for various parts of the world; the application of this approach on a global basis may define what is the absolute minimum knowledge base and behavioural standard expected of a 'dentist' in the health care setting, while respecting local limitations and values. The review of documents and distillation of recommendations is presented as a reference and consideration for dental undergraduate programmes and their administration.Mesh:
Year: 2002 PMID: 12390257 DOI: 10.1034/j.1600-0579.6.s3.5.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Dent Educ ISSN: 1396-5883 Impact factor: 2.355