Martin Talbot1. 1. Institute of Education, University of London, UK. martin.talbot@sth.nhs.uk
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Graduate medical education in the UK is in danger of being subsumed in a minimalist discourse of competency. ARGUMENT: While accepting that competence in a doctor is a sine qua non, the author criticises the construction of a graduate and specialist medical education based solely upon a competency model. Many competency models follow the concepts of either academic competence or operational competence, both of which have lately been subject to criticism. CONCLUSION: The author discusses the need for replacing such criterion-referenced models in favour of a model that engages the higher order competence, performance and understanding which represent professional practice at its best.
BACKGROUND: Graduate medical education in the UK is in danger of being subsumed in a minimalist discourse of competency. ARGUMENT: While accepting that competence in a doctor is a sine qua non, the author criticises the construction of a graduate and specialist medical education based solely upon a competency model. Many competency models follow the concepts of either academic competence or operational competence, both of which have lately been subject to criticism. CONCLUSION: The author discusses the need for replacing such criterion-referenced models in favour of a model that engages the higher order competence, performance and understanding which represent professional practice at its best.