scholarly journals Physical fitness of first-year medical students at the University of British Columbia

1987 ◽  
Vol 62 (11) ◽  
pp. 923-5
Author(s):  
P R Grantham ◽  
R C McGraw ◽  
E C Rhodes
2015 ◽  
Vol 45 (4) ◽  
pp. 298-321
Author(s):  
J Paul Grayson

Teaching evaluations have become part of life on Canadian campuses; however, there is no agreement among researchers as to their validity. In this article, comparisons were made between first- and third-year collective evaluations of professors’ performance at the University of British Columbia, York University, and McGill University. Overall, it was found that students who provided low evaluations in their first year were also likely to do so in their third year. This effect held independent of degree of campus engagement, sex, student status (domestic or international), and generational status (students who were the first in their families to attend university, compared to those who were not). Given that over the course of their studies, students likely would have been exposed to a range of different behaviours on the part of their professors, it is argued that the propensity of a large number of students to give consistently low evaluations was a form of “habitual behaviour.”  


Author(s):  
Carolyn Labun

At the University of British Columbia Okanagan School of Engineering (SOE), first year engineering students take a 3-credit course in Engineering Communication. Designed to replace the traditional 3-credits of English taken by other first year students, APSC 176 introduces students to the fundamentals of engineering communication, with a strong emphasis on written communication. The paper is describes the types of assignments given to first year students, the techniques used to encourage meaningful revision of written assignments, and the methods used to evaluate written assignments. Particular attention will be paid to a two-week first term design project (such as the assignment, supplemental materials including exercises, and marking guidelines). It should be noted that the design is entirely conceptual - students are not required to develop a prototype, but rather to work with a team to develop (and subsequently, explain and market) a concept in response to an RFP.


2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 150-161
Author(s):  
Sharon Hanna ◽  
Jason Pither ◽  
Mathew Vis-Dunbar

The scientific, social, and economic advantages that accrue from Open Science (OS) practices—ways of doing research that emphasize reproducibility, transparency, and accessibility at all stages of the research cycle—are now widely recognized in nations around the world and by international bodies such as the United Nations and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. However, program wide or coordinated instruction of undergraduate students in OS practices remains uncommon. At the University of British Columbia in Canada, we have started to develop a comprehensive undergraduate OS program that can be adapted to and woven into diverse subject curricula. We report on the context and planning of the pilot module of the program, “Open Science 101”, its implementation in first-year Biology in Fall 2019, and qualitative results of an attitudinal survey of students following their course.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1949 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
pp. 370-370
Author(s):  
THOMAS E. SHAFFER

Professor Cureton and his associates in physical education at the University of Illinois present in this volume a wealth of information and experience in the field of estimating physical fitness. Certainly welcome at any time, the book is especially appropriate now when interest in positive improvement of health, i.e., fitness, is increasing. Total fitness, of course, implies more than freedom from physical disease or disability; and omission of sections on mental, social and emotional fitness is recognized by the authors early in the book. This volume comprises a review of the literature on testing physical fitness, an analysis of 22 tests for appraisal of physique, organic efficiency and motor efficiency applied in 1945 to 110 first-year medical students and the use of test results in health counseling. Attention is focused on the challenge to improve the health of supposedly normal individuals.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lida Shams ◽  
Shahram Yazdani ◽  
Taha Nasiri ◽  
Jamil Sadeghifar ◽  
Sara Shahbazi

Abstract Background Extensive factors affect students' learning such as their learning style, the identification of which is considered as important in solving the problems and shortcomings of educational system in the current situation. The present study aimed to determine the learning style of first-year medical students in the Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences in 2018.Methods In the present descriptive and analytical study, 111 first-year medical students at the university were included through census method. The data were collected by using VARK learning style standard questionnaire and analyzed using SPSS16 software based on the questionnaire guide.Results Most students had a multi-modal learning style (52%) although no significant difference was observed between preferring single- and multi-model styles. Among the multi-modal learning styles, bi-modal style was more applied by subjects (21.62%). In addition, aural and visual learning styles were determined as the most (20, 37.74%) and least (8, 15.09%) frequent styles preferred by students, respectively.Conclusion Due to the preference of most students to use multimodal styles, medical instructors should highlight the diversity of learners' learning styles and select appropriate methods for students' learning.


InterConf ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 196-200
Author(s):  
O. Ivanchenko ◽  
O. Melnikova ◽  
K. Lurie

The quality and integrity of training of future specialists of any specialty are ensured by the integration of fundamental and professional knowledge. In medical education, it is of vital importance. With the help of questionnaires, surveys of first-year medical students, to determine their subjective attitude to basic school training in physics, chemistry, biology, mathematics after the first semester of study at the university, as well as to analyze the formation of understanding the integration link "school - fundamental university disciplines - clinical disciplines of the university".


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